Spacesaver Systems, Inc. v. Adam ( 2014 )


Menu:
  • Spacesaver Systems, Inc. v. Carla Adam, No. 98, September Term, 2013, Opinion by
    Adkins, J.
    EMPLOYMENT LAW — INTERPRETATION OF EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT
    — EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT CONTAINING FOR-CAUSE PROVISION AND
    NO DEFINITE TERM OF EMPLOYMENT — FOR-CAUSE PROVISION
    NEGATES THE PRESUMPTION OF AT-WILL EMPLOYMENT: A for-cause
    provision in a written employment contract negates the presumption of at-will
    employment.
    EMPLOYMENT LAW — INTERPRETATION OF EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT
    — EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT CONTAINING FOR-CAUSE PROVISION AND
    NO DEFINITE TERM OF EMPLOYMENT — “CONTINUOUS FOR-CAUSE,”
    NOT LIFETIME CONTRACT: “Continuous for-cause” better describes the nature of a
    written employment agreement that has a for-cause provision and no definite term of
    employment than “lifetime contract” does.
    Circuit Court for Montgomery County
    Case No. 330005-V
    Argued: June 5, 2014
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 98
    September Term, 2013
    SPACESAVER SYSTEMS, INC.
    v.
    CARLA ADAM
    Barbera, C.J.
    Harrell
    Battaglia
    Greene
    Adkins
    McDonald
    Rodowsky, Lawrence F., Retired,
    Specially Assigned,
    JJ.
    Opinion by Adkins, J.
    Filed: August 27, 2014
    Oil and water naturally resist each other. No matter how much one tries, the two
    cannot be mixed together successfully. As this case demonstrates, the same is often true
    of family and business. Following a dispute between sibling business partners, we are
    asked to re-examine the contours of the firmly established doctrine of at-will employment.
    We do so in order to determine if a written contract containing a for-cause provision, but
    no definite term of employment, exists as an at-will contract, a lifetime contract, or
    something else.
    FACTS AND LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
    Petitioner, Spacesaver Systems, Inc. (“SSI”), was incorporated in the District of
    Columbia in 1973 by Jack and Alyce Schmidt. SSI sells and installs mobile storage
    equipment, including tracked shelving systems, to businesses and governmental
    organizations with large storage needs. In the 1990’s, the Schmidts began transferring
    ownership of the business to their three children: Carla Adam (“Respondent”), Amy
    Hamilton (“Hamilton”), and David Craig (“Craig”). As the Schmidts eased out of the
    business and moved to Florida, the three siblings assumed greater responsibility in the
    company.
    In 2006, Adam and Hamilton became concerned that Craig was stealing from SSI.
    Hamilton, Respondent, Albert Ellentuck (SSI’s corporate attorney), and Erik Kloster
    (SSI’s corporate accountant) met to discuss Craig’s affiliation with SSI. As a result of this
    meeting, Ellentuck revised the siblings’ employment agreements, which subsequently
    contained a provision for termination for cause. This provision appeared as follows:
    4.2 Termination by the Company For Cause. The Company
    may, at any time and without notice, terminate the Employee
    for “cause”. Termination by the Company of the Employee for
    “cause” shall include but not be limited to termination based
    on any of the following grounds: (a) insubordination or refusal
    to perform duties of employee’s position as directed by the
    President of Company and affirmed by a majority vote of the
    Directors; (b) fraud, misappropriation, embezzlement or acts
    of similar dishonesty; (c) conviction of a felony involving
    moral turpitude; (d) illegal use of drugs or excessive use of
    alcohol in the workplace; (e) intentional and willful
    misconduct that may subject the Company to criminal or civil
    liability; (f) breach of the Employee’s duty of loyalty,
    including the diversion or usurpation of corporate
    opportunities properly belonging to the Company; (g) willful
    disregard of Company policies and procedures; (h) material
    breach of any of the terms herein; and (i) material
    nonperformance or negligence in Employee’s performance of
    her duties.
    Adam’s Executive Employment Agreement (the “Employment Agreement”) references a
    “term of this Employment Agreement,” but the parties failed to define this term.
    Along with the revised employment agreements, Ellentuck drafted a Stock Purchase
    Agreement so that if an employee were terminated from SSI, she could be compelled to
    sell her stock to the other shareholders. Articles 3 and 5 of the Stock Purchase Agreement
    provide that SSI will redeem the stock in the event of disability or death of a shareholder.
    Article 4 provides that shareholders can be forced to sell their shares if they engage in
    “Prohibited Acts.” These “Prohibited Acts” generally mirror the for-cause provisions
    listed in the Employment Agreement.1
    1
    There are two differences between the “Prohibited Acts” and for-cause provisions.
    First, the for-cause provision in the Employment Agreement allows dismissal for
    “insubordination or refusal to perform duties of employee’s position as directed by the
    President of Company and affirmed by a majority vote of the Directors.” The Stock
    2
    On October 19, 2006, Adam, Craig, and Hamilton each signed the individual
    executive employment agreements and stock purchase agreements drafted by Ellentuck.
    Shortly after the employment agreements were executed, Craig resigned as President and
    Director of SSI. Pursuant to Adam’s Stock Purchase Agreement, Craig’s stock was sold
    equally to Adam and Hamilton, who consequently each held a 50% interest in SSI.
    Despite Craig’s departure, sibling harmony did not last long, as Hamilton and Adam
    began to have disputes about their respective job responsibilities and compensation.
    According to Hamilton, Adam’s sales performance was “not very good.” Consequently,
    Adam was removed from the sales force.
    On May 28, 2009, Hamilton wrote Adam expressing her intent to acquire Adam’s
    SSI stock, and concluding that Adam’s employment was terminated. The conflict reached
    its apex when, on January 28, 2010, SSI sent Adam a letter terminating her employment.
    In response, Adam filed a Complaint on April 9, 2010 against SSI and Hamilton in the
    Circuit Court for Montgomery County. On July 30, 2010, Adam filed an Amended
    Complaint, which alleged that she was terminated without cause in violation of her
    Employment Agreement.
    Adam filed a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, contending that the
    Employment Agreement established that she could only be terminated for cause. SSI filed
    an Opposition to Motion for Partial Summary Judgment and Cross-Motion for Summary
    Purchase Agreement contains no analogous provision. Second, the Stock Purchase
    Agreement includes as a Prohibited Act “termination for whatever reason of said
    Shareholder’s employment with the Corporation.” The Employment Agreement contains
    no analogous provision.
    3
    Judgment, denying that the Employment Agreement guaranteed Adam lifetime
    employment and asserting that even if the Employment Agreement were so construed,
    Adam had failed to give “additional consideration” for a lifetime contract.
    Following a hearing, the motions court denied both motions for summary judgment
    on August 19, 2011.      The hearing judge found the contract ambiguous, ruling that
    “extraneous evidence of what the parties intended may be admitted to assist the court in
    determining the agreement of the parties.” After three days of testimony, the trial court
    ultimately concluded that the Employment Agreement transformed what had previously
    been an “at-will relationship” to a “lifetime contract,” such that Adam could only be
    terminated for cause, death, or disability. Crucial to the trial court’s analysis was that the
    for-cause provision would be rendered superfluous if the Employment Agreement were
    construed as at-will. The trial judge rhetorically asked, “why in the world would you have
    to worry about [cause] if you had an at-will contract?” The trial judge found a breach of
    the Employment Agreement, and awarded Adam $255,868.20, representing lost salary and
    commission.
    SSI appealed to the Court of Special Appeals, asserting that the trial court erred in
    concluding that the Employment Agreement was not an at-will contract, but rather a for-
    cause lifetime contract. Spacesaver Sys., Inc. v. Adam, 
    212 Md. App. 422
    , 
    69 A.3d 494
    (2013). On June 27, 2013, the Court of Special Appeals partially affirmed and partially
    reversed the trial court’s interpretation of the contract, holding that the contract’s plain
    language created a “continuous contract terminable for-cause,” which obviated the need
    for special consideration. 
    Id. at 447,
    69 A.3d at 510.
    4
    SSI petitioned for writ of certiorari, which this Court granted on October 18, 2013
    to answer the following questions:2
    1. Is there any difference between lifetime and “continuous
    for-cause” contracts?
    2. Did the Court of Special Appeals err in applying dicta from
    Towson University v. Conte, 
    384 Md. 68
    , 
    862 A.2d 941
    (2004),
    which suggests that a “just cause” provision transforms at-will
    employment into lifetime employment terminable only for
    cause?
    3. Does the presence of a for-cause provision, which does not
    state employment is terminable only for cause, transform at-
    will employment to lifetime employment terminable only for
    cause?
    As to the second question, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals.
    The first and third questions we shall answer in the course of explaining why this written
    employment contract is distinct from the alleged “lifetime employment contracts” that we
    have historically held to be unenforceable.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    “The interpretation of a contract, including the determination of whether a contract
    is ambiguous, is a question of law, subject to de novo review.” Towson Univ. v. Conte,
    
    384 Md. 68
    , 78, 
    862 A.2d 941
    , 946 (2004) (quoting Sy-Lene v. Starwood, 
    376 Md. 157
    ,
    163, 
    829 A.2d 540
    , 544 (2003)). Maryland law dictates the objective interpretation of
    contracts, which provides for the following:
    [A court is to] determine from the language of the agreement
    itself what a reasonable person in the position of the parties
    2
    For the sake of brevity, we shortened the questions from how they were presented
    in the briefs, retaining their essence.
    5
    would have meant at the time it was effectuated. In addition,
    when the language of the contract is plain and unambiguous
    there is no room for construction, and a court must presume
    that the parties meant what they expressed. In these
    circumstances, the true test of what is meant is not what the
    parties to the contract intended it to mean, but what a
    reasonable person in the position of the parties would have
    thought it meant. Consequently, the clear and unambiguous
    language of an agreement will not give away to what the parties
    thought that the agreement meant or intended it to mean.
    Gen. Motors Acceptance Corp. v. Daniels, 
    303 Md. 254
    , 261, 
    492 A.2d 1306
    , 1310 (1985).
    In determining whether a contract is ambiguous, a court may consider “the character of the
    contract, its purpose, and the facts and circumstances of the parties at the time of
    execution[.]” Calomiris v. Woods, 
    353 Md. 425
    , 436, 
    727 A.2d 358
    , 363 (1999) (quoting
    Pac. Indem. v. Interstate Fire & Cas., 
    302 Md. 383
    , 388, 
    488 A.2d 486
    , 488 (1985))
    (internal quotation marks omitted).3
    DISCUSSSION
    Petitioner attacks the opinion of the Court of Special Appeals on several grounds.
    First, Petitioner maintains that when the Employment Agreement is read in conjunction
    with SSI’s Employee Handbook,4 it is clear that the contract could be terminated with or
    without cause. SSI highlights that the Employment Agreement’s for-cause provision says
    3
    “The circumstances for this purpose include the entire situation, as it appeared
    to the parties, and in appropriate cases may include facts known to one party of which the
    other had reason to know.” Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 202 cmt. b (1981)
    (emphasis added).
    4
    SSI’s Employee Handbook “provides an overview of [SSI’s] personnel policies
    and benefits.” SSI further states that “[w]e expect each employee to read this Employee
    Handbook carefully; it is a valuable reference for understanding your rights and
    responsibilities.”
    6
    that SSI “may” terminate for cause. The provision did not say that Adam can “only” be
    terminated for cause. Petitioner contends that if the for-cause provision were meant to
    carry so much weight, it would have authorized termination “only” for cause, which the
    Employment Agreement did not do.
    Petitioner’s most significant argument concerns the distinction that the intermediate
    appellate court drew between “continuous for-cause” and lifetime contracts. In Petitioner’s
    view, there is no distinction between the two. SSI contends that both are terminable by the
    employer only for cause and terminable by the employee without cause. SSI alleges that
    the Court of Special Appeals described Adam’s employment with the novel moniker of
    “continuous for-cause” to escape the requirements to establish a lifetime employment
    contract.
    Expanding on this theme, Petitioner leans on the major presumption under Maryland
    law that an employment relationship is presumptively at-will unless the parties clearly and
    expressly set forth their agreement that the contract is to last for a specific period of time.
    In SSI’s view, the lower court failed to apply the heightened standard applicable to lifetime
    contracts, making no finding that SSI’s intent to provide lifetime employment was specific,
    definite, and unequivocal. Moreover, Petitioner argues that Adam failed to provide the
    “special consideration” required to support such a contract. In sum, Petitioner contends
    that, instead of addressing the various issues surrounding lifetime employment contracts,
    the Court of Specials Appeals simply created an “evil twin” and said “it is a for-cause
    contract that is of continuous duration, but it is not a lifetime contract.” 
    Spacesaver, 212 Md. App. at 448
    , 69 A.3d at 510.
    7
    Finally, and in a similar vein, Petitioner argues that the Court of Special Appeals
    ignored a strong precept of Maryland law that the at-will doctrine invariably applies when
    an employment contract is of an indefinite duration. Specifically, SSI posits that the
    intermediate appellate court has wrongly elevated dicta to law by holding that under Conte,
    the inclusion of a for-cause provision transforms an at-will contract to a for-cause contract.
    In SSI’s view, this directly contravenes our previous holding in Suburban Hospital, Inc. v.
    Dwiggins, 
    324 Md. 294
    , 
    596 A.2d 1069
    (1991) that an employment contract of indefinite
    duration is employment at-will, even if it states some bases giving the employer cause for
    termination. In this respect, SSI contends that this holding erodes the doctrine of lifetime
    employment.
    In reply, Respondent urges us to affirm the Court of Special Appeals. Rather than
    responding directly to each of Petitioner’s arguments, Respondent lays out a number of
    propositions that, in her view, compel the affirmance of the Court of Special Appeals.5
    First, Respondent alleges that the Employment Agreement is not an unambiguous at-will
    contract.   She underscores that two lower courts have rejected the contract as
    unambiguously at-will based on the rationale that a for-cause provision is inconsistent with
    5
    In particular, Respondent does not feel that this Court needs to address the
    distinction between “continuous for-cause” and lifetime contracts. She states, “[b]ecause,
    however, [she] is asking this Court to affirm that the Employment Agreement is not an at-
    will contract, this Court need not go farther and decide the proper label for the Employment
    Agreement.”
    8
    an at-will contract.6 In her view, the very terms of the Employment Agreement establish
    that it is not an at-will agreement. Similarly, Respondent rejects any applicability of the
    SSI Employee Handbook, observing that the Employment Agreement itself explicitly
    states that it will trump the provisions of the Handbook.
    Respondent similarly rejects the relevance of “special consideration.” Respondent
    states that no Maryland authority supports the position that “special consideration” is
    necessary to establish a contract such as this one. Adam avers that, although some
    jurisdictions require that lifetime contracts be supported by “special consideration,” we are
    dealing with a “continuous for-cause” contract, not a lifetime contract.
    Finally, moving to a policy perspective, Adam maintains that affirming the
    judgment below will not have adverse repercussions for employers generally. She argues
    that any decision on this case will be limited to the facts of this case—one involving a
    closely held corporation and an employment agreement for high-level corporate officers.
    Moreover, Respondent contends that employers can easily avoid the burdens of for-cause
    employment by drafting employment contracts explicitly to say “at-will” when they are
    meant to be at will.7
    Presumption Of At-Will Employment
    6
    Among other evidence, Respondent points to testimony from the drafting attorney,
    Ellentuck, who testified that the contract was ambiguous on its face, particularly when the
    contract is read in conjunction with the Employee Handbook.
    7
    Respondent also argues that “SSI is precluded from arguing that the employment
    agreement is void.” Despite Petitioner’s statement that “[t]he contract utterly fails for lack
    of any clear and definite agreement as to Ms. Adam’s compensation[,]” we are not
    convinced that Petitioner has argued that the contract is void in this appeal.
    9
    We begin by laying out the fundamentals of Maryland employment law. Our
    starting place is one of our most venerated common law precepts, the employment at-will
    doctrine. In McCullough Iron Company v. Carpenter, this Court announced that “[t]here
    can be no doubt that, in this country, the rule is, an indefinite hiring is prima facie a hiring
    at will.” 
    67 Md. 554
    , 557, 
    11 A. 176
    , 178 (1887). This Court has confirmed this principle
    repeatedly and unequivocally. See Porterfield v. Mascari II, Inc., 
    374 Md. 402
    , 421–22,
    
    823 A.2d 590
    , 601 (2003) (“The employment at-will doctrine long has been part of the
    common law of Maryland.”); Adler v. Am. Standard Corp., 
    291 Md. 31
    , 35, 
    432 A.2d 464
    ,
    467 (1981) (“The common law rule, applicable in Maryland, is that an employment
    contract of indefinite duration, that is, at will, can be legally terminated at the pleasure of
    either party at any time.”); see also Stanley Mazaroff & Todd Horn, Maryland Employment
    Law § 3.02[1] (2d ed. 2014) (“Recognizing the continued vitality of the employment at
    will doctrine, Maryland courts have held that an employment relationship presumptively is
    at will unless the parties clearly and expressly set forth their agreement that the contract is
    to last for a specific period of time.”).
    This common law doctrine reflects the courts’ concern with promoting freedom of
    contract and fundamental fairness. See 
    Dwiggins, 324 Md. at 303
    , 596 A.2d at 1073 (“The
    [employment at-will] doctrine was born during a laissez-faire period in our country’s
    history, when personal freedom to contract or to engage in a business enterprise was
    considered to be of primary importance.”). This rationale is clearly expounded in Samuel
    Williston & Richard A. Lord, A Treatise on the Law of Contracts:
    10
    [T]he courts have shown a marked reluctance to enforce
    contracts for life employment. In large part, this stems from
    the realization that such contracts frequently are, in practical
    effect, unilateral undertakings by the employer to provide a job
    for so long as the employee wishes to continue in it but impose
    no corresponding obligation upon the employee. When this is
    the case, the burden of performance is unequal, as the employer
    appears to be bound to the terms of the contract, while the
    employee is free to terminate it at will. Accordingly, it has
    been said:
    An employee is never presumed to engage his
    services permanently, thereby cutting himself off
    from all chances of improving his condition;
    indeed, in this land of opportunity it would be
    against public policy and the spirit of our
    institutions that any man should thus handicap
    himself; and the law will presume . . . that he did
    not so intend. And if the contract of employment
    be not binding on the employee for the whole
    term of such employment, then it cannot be
    binding upon the employer; there would be lack
    of “mutuality.”
    § 54:39 (4th ed. 2001) (quoting Pitcher v. United Oil & Gas Syndicate, 
    174 La. 66
    , 69, 
    139 So. 760
    , 761 (La. 1932)) (ellipsis in original) (footnotes omitted).
    Yet we observe that presumptions can only act as an aid to interpreting a contract,
    not as a substantive limit on parties’ ability to contract. See 
    id. (“The employment-at-will
    doctrine is a rule of contract construction, not a rule imposing substantive limitations on
    the parties’ freedom to contract . . . ‘[i]f the parties include a clear job security provision
    in an employment contract, the presumption that the employment is at-will may be
    negated.’” (quoting Eck & Assocs., Inc. v. Alusuisse Flexible Packaging, Inc., 
    700 N.E.2d 1163
    , 1167 (Ind. Ct. App. 1998))) (footnotes omitted). Indeed, the employment at-will
    doctrine, even in the seminal case of McCullough, was not presented as absolute. 
    67 Md. 11
    at 
    557, 11 A. at 178
    . There, this Court observed that “an indefinite hiring is prima facie a
    hiring at will.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    Nothing in this doctrine prohibits contracting parties
    from showing a mutual understanding that rebuts this prima facie presumption.
    Indeed the presumption of at-will employment can be defeated through the inclusion
    of a just-cause requirement, or by specifying a duration of employment:
    While the language of the contract itself may express a just
    cause requirement, a contractual delineation of the length of
    the employment period will also create a just cause
    employment relationship because by specifying the length or
    term of employment, the employer usually is considered to
    have surrendered its ability to terminate the employee at its
    discretion.
    
    Conte, 384 Md. at 80
    , 862 A.2d at 947–48; see also Mazaroff, 
    discussed supra
    .
    One type of for-cause employment is lifetime employment. We discussed lifetime
    employment at length in Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Co. of Baltimore City v.
    Murray, 
    198 Md. 526
    , 
    84 A.2d 870
    (1951). “[A] contract for permanent or life employment
    is valid and continues to operate as long as the employer remains in the business and has
    work for the employee and the employee is able and willing to do his work satisfactorily
    and does not give good cause for his discharge.” 
    Id. at 533,
    84 A.2d at 873. We declared,
    however, that those claiming a lifetime employment contract faced an uphill climb.
    First, the law protects stockholders’ ability to alter a corporation’s management by
    electing boards of directors. 
    Id. at 531,
    84 A.2d at 872. Recognizing that the directors’
    authority would be hollow if corporate officers were able to grant “persons of their
    selection employment for life,” we stated that one hurdle to lifetime contacts is “proof that
    12
    there was definite authority, by by-law, action by the board of directors, or otherwise, to
    make such a contract.” 
    Id. Second, a
    lifetime employment contract must be supported by consideration beyond
    that incident to accepting the position. See id. at 
    533, 84 A.2d at 873
    (holding that “the
    mere giving up of a job, business or profession by one who decides to accept a contract for
    alleged life employment . . . to place himself in a position to accept and perform the
    contract” is not sufficient consideration for lifetime employment); see also Page v.
    Carolina Coach Co., 
    667 F.2d 1156
    , 1158 (4th Cir. 1982) (holding that relinquishing a job
    and benefits to assume a new position was not sufficient consideration for lifetime
    employment).
    Third, a lifetime employment contract must clearly stipulate the “terms as to work
    and salary” in order to be enforceable. 
    Murray, 198 Md. at 534
    , 84 A.2d at 874; see also
    Balt. & Ohio R. Co. v. King, 
    168 Md. 142
    , 149, 
    176 A. 626
    , 628 (1935) (holding that
    lifetime contracts “at least should be specific and definite, with little or no room for
    misunderstanding, even if they are not required to be in writing” (quoting Arentz v. Morse
    Dry Dock & Repair Co., 
    249 N.Y. 439
    , 443, 
    164 N.E. 342
    , 344 (N.Y. 1928))); Yost v.
    Early, 
    87 Md. App. 364
    , 383–85, 
    589 A.2d 1291
    , 1300–01 (1991) (reaffirming that an
    alleged oral lifetime employment contract was only employment at-will because there was
    no showing that it clearly expressed the specific terms of the agreement, including duties,
    wages, and performance guidelines).
    Before evaluating the Employment Agreement, we observe that our primary inquiry
    concerns whether the contract created at-will or for-cause employment. For our purposes
    13
    here, employment contracts can be broken into three categories, those with: (i) specific
    temporal duration, terminable before the expiration only for cause; (ii) no specified
    temporal duration, but containing a clear for-cause termination provision; and (iii) no
    temporal duration, and no for-cause termination provision, which are terminable at will.
    Placing the Employment Agreement in one of these three categories will determine the
    resolution of this controversy, as Adam has no cause of action sounding in breach of her
    employment contract if she fits in the third category, at-will employment. See James J.
    O’Malley, “Cause of Action for Wrongful Discharge from Employment in Breach of
    Contract,” 18 Causes of Action 229 (1989) (“To establish a prima facie case in an action
    for wrongful discharge from employment in breach of contract, the plaintiff must prove
    that: 1. The defendant promised . . . c. that the plaintiff would be discharged only for just
    cause[.]”).
    Nature Of The Employment Agreement
    “Our analysis begins, as it should, with the language of the employment contract at
    issue.” 
    Conte, 384 Md. at 78
    , 862 A.2d at 946. Under the objective interpretation of
    contracts, we focus upon whether a reasonable person, in the parties’ position, would have
    thought that the contract provided any measure of job security. “Under the objective view,
    a written contract is ambiguous if, when read by a reasonably prudent person, it is
    susceptible of more than one meaning.” 
    Calomiris, 353 Md. at 436
    , 727 A.2d at 363
    (citation omitted). Moreover, this Court has been clear in observing that:
    “[a] recognized rule of construction in ascertaining the true
    meaning of a contract is that the contract must be construed in
    its entirety and, if reasonably possible, effect must be given to
    14
    each clause so that a court will not find an interpretation which
    casts out or disregards a meaningful part of the language of the
    writing unless no other course can be sensibly and reasonably
    followed.”
    Cochran v. Norkunas, 
    398 Md. 1
    , 17–18, 
    919 A.2d 700
    , 710 (2007) (quoting Sagner v.
    Glenangus Farms, 
    234 Md. 156
    , 167, 
    198 A.2d 277
    , 283 (1964)).
    Although the Employment Agreement is silent as to its duration, which can signify
    at-will employment, it also contains a for-cause provision, which negates an at-will
    employment contract. Conte is instructive on this point. After evaluating Dr. Conte’s
    employment contract, which had a for-cause provision similar to Adam’s and a definite
    durational term, we held that the contract “makes clear that Dr. Conte was not an ‘at-will’
    employee.” 
    Conte, 384 Md. at 79
    , 862 A.2d at 947. We also held that the university could
    not avail itself of the protections afforded employers who terminate at-will employees. 
    Id. Of special
    import here, the Conte Court also opined that either a for-cause provision
    or “a contractual delineation of the length of the employment period” will independently
    establish that an employee was not at-will. 
    Id. at 80,
    862 A.2d at 948. Petitioner
    characterizes this pronouncement as dicta that is at odds with Dwiggins. We agree that it
    was dicta, but feel secure in embracing it here. Indeed, Conte finds support from a number
    of other jurisdictions that have adopted a similar rule. See Bell v. Ivory, 
    966 F. Supp. 23
    ,
    29 (D.D.C. 1997) (“The presumption of ‘at will’ employment can be overcome by the
    creation of a contract of employment for a fixed term or an indefinite contract that allows
    termination only for cause.”) (emphasis added); Gladden v. Ark. Children’s Hosp., 
    292 Ark. 130
    , 136, 
    728 S.W.2d 501
    , 505 (Ark. 1987) (“[W]e reject as outmoded and untenable
    15
    [the view] that the at will rule applies even where the employment agreement contains a
    provision that the employee will not be discharged except for cause, unless it is for a
    definite term.”); Dillman v. N.H. College, 
    150 N.H. 431
    , 434, 
    838 A.2d 1274
    , 1276 (N.H.
    2003) (“Where, however, an employment agreement specifies a definite term, it is
    generally implied that the employee can be discharged only for cause.”).
    We disagree with Petitioner’s claim that the rule from Conte that we embrace here
    is in any way contradicted by Dwiggins. In Dwiggins, an employee was suspended for
    violating rules set by his 
    employer. 324 Md. at 299
    , 596 A.2d at 1071. He was reinstated
    but placed on probation and required to sign a document with very specific performance
    conditions. Id. at 
    299, 596 A.2d at 1071
    –72. After violating the terms of this probation,
    he was terminated, but then brought suit claiming that he was no longer an at-will
    employee. 
    Id. at 300–01,
    596 A.2d at 1072. The Court held that the reinstatement
    agreement that the parties signed to resolve the employee’s disciplinary action and govern
    his probationary status would not convert an at-will employment agreement into a for-
    cause agreement. 
    Id. at 304,
    596 A.2d at 1074. Thus, Dwiggins involved performance
    conditions with which an employee must comply to maintain satisfactory probationary
    status under a reinstatement agreement. This is fundamentally distinct from an employee
    who, free from probationary status, contracts the terms under which her employer will have
    cause to terminate her employment in an employment agreement. Thus, we find no reason
    to hesitate in relying on the dictum in Conte to support our conclusion that the for-cause
    termination clause in the Employment Agreement removed it from the category of at-will
    employment.
    16
    This conclusion is consonant with the position of the parties at the time that the
    contract was executed. We emphasize that each of the three siblings owned one-third of
    SSI and also served as a high-level executive. Moreover, they each signed a Stock
    Purchase Agreement allowing the corporation to acquire their shares at a reduced value if
    their employment were terminated. A reasonable person in that position could only have
    thought that the language of the for-cause provision would be operative and provide for the
    job security stated by its terms. 
    See supra
    . Thus, the only legitimate interpretation of the
    plain language of the Employment Agreement is that the parties reasonably expected and
    mutually assented to some degree of job security. This is in contrast to other situations in
    which the employee has no reasonable expectation of job security. See Duncan v. St.
    Joseph’s Hosp. and Med. Center, 
    183 Ariz. 349
    , 
    903 P.2d 1107
    (Ariz. Ct. App. 1995)
    (finding no reasonable expectation of job security from employee handbook or written
    assurances from employer’s president and CEO); Rowe v. Montgomery Ward & Co., 
    437 Mich. 627
    , 
    473 N.W.2d 268
    (Mich. 1991) (finding no reasonable expectation of
    employment from employer’s written policy statements or oral statements made during
    plaintiff’s preemployment interview); Hartbrager v. Frank Paxton Co., 
    115 N.M. 665
    , 
    857 P.2d 776
    (N.M. 1993) (finding no reasonable expectation of job security from supervisor’s
    statements or from employer’s custom of retaining employees for long periods of time);
    Reasoner v. Bill Woeste Chevrolet, Inc., 
    134 Ohio App. 3d 196
    , 
    730 N.E.2d 992
    (Ohio Ct.
    App. 1999) (finding no reasonable expectation of job security from supervisor’s
    statements).
    17
    Yet the conclusion that Adam’s Employment Agreement was for-cause, on its own,
    would leave one key issue unaddressed. As described above, Adam’s Employment
    Agreement did not provide a specific term of employment. Significantly, Section 2.1 of
    the Employment Agreement referenced an “Exhibit A” that would set forth Adam’s salary
    “for years beyond the first year” of employment, but this exhibit was never created. In
    other words, SSI had the option of setting a definite term for Adam’s employment but chose
    not to. Thus, the Court is presented with a for-cause contract with an indefinite durational
    term. Petitioner argues that such a contract must be characterized as providing for lifetime
    employment and, consequently, tested against the three requirements for a lifetime
    contract. We move to this contention now.
    “Continuous For-Cause” v. Lifetime Contracts
    The Court of Special Appeals, in an opinion authored by Judge Kenney,
    distinguished Adam’s Employment Agreement from lifetime employment, characterizing
    it as “continuous for-cause.” 
    Spacesaver, 212 Md. App. at 442
    , 69 A.3d at 507. In drawing
    this distinction, the court first examined three cases. In Board of Street Commissioners v.
    Williams, 
    96 Md. 232
    , 
    53 A. 923
    (1903), a statute governing employment contracts for
    police officers stated that the officers were “subject to removal for cause,” but provided no
    definite duration of employment. As the court observed,
    [R]emoval for cause is . . . the only limitation fixed by the
    statute to their tenure. This being so, an appointment is in legal
    effect an appointment during good behavior, or so long as the
    appointee is competent to discharge the duties of the office or
    efficient in the performance of them.
    18
    
    Id. at 238,
    53 A. at 924. This meant that the term was “not, therefore, indefinite, nor [was]
    it determinable at the mere will of the appointing power.” 
    Id. Based on
    that reasoning, the
    Court held that an appointment that can be terminated only for cause is not an appointment
    at will, but rather has a definite term. 
    Id. at 239,
    53 A. at 925.
    Similarly, in County Board of Education v. Cearfoss, a teacher entered a contract
    “for an undetermined number of years[.]” 
    165 Md. 178
    , 181, 
    166 A. 723
    , 733 (1933).
    After the first or second year of school, either party could terminate the contract with
    adequate notice, but otherwise, the contract continued “year to year, unless the teacher were
    suspended or dismissed” for “immorality, dishonesty, intemperance, insubordination,
    incompetency or willful neglect of duty.” 
    Id. at 187,
    166 A. at 736. The Court of Appeals
    described this contract as “a tenure to continue until abrogated for sufficient cause.” 
    Id. at 188,
    166 A. at 736.8
    Drawing from Williams, Cearfoss, and Conte,9 the Court of Special Appeals stated
    that “the inclusion of the for-cause provision in Adam’s Employment Agreement is
    sufficient to overcome the presumption that, ‘when the length of the employment contract
    is not specified, the employee is deemed to be . . . at will[.]’” 
    Spacesaver, 212 Md. App. at 442
    , 69 A.3d at 506. In particular, the court relied on the holding of Williams that “such
    8
    Notably, the Court did not hold that the teacher’s contract provided for lifetime or
    permanent employment. See Cnty. Bd. of Educ. v. Cearfoss, 
    165 Md. 178
    , 188, 
    166 A. 723
    , 736 (1933) (“It would not be proper . . . to construe the contract as tending to assure
    to the teachers a permanency of employment.”).
    9
    
    Discussed supra
    .
    19
    contracts, although lacking a typical durational term of employment are, nonetheless, ‘for
    a definite term[.]’” 
    Id. (quoting Williams
    , 96 Md. at 
    238–39, 53 A. at 925
    ).
    Petitioner challenges any reliance on Williams and Cearfoss, noting that these cases
    involved policy concerns surrounding public employees with “tenured” status that did not
    apply to the private sector. SSI argues, in other words, that in private sector contracts there
    is no public purpose to “justify a retreat” from the typical presumption of at-will status.
    We appreciate the contextual differences of these cases. Throughout the cases we have
    examined, however, courts have repeatedly applied the same contract principles in both the
    public and private sector contexts. Tenure is just one type of contractual for-cause
    employment. See Cearfoss, 165 Md. at 
    188, 166 A. at 736
    (“Consistently with this policy,
    the contracts with the teachers evidently designed that they might rely, after the first year,
    upon a tenure to continue until abrogated for sufficient cause.”).           Thus, we reject
    Petitioner’s position that a for-cause provision must be supported by a “public purpose” in
    order to be operative.
    The Court of Special Appeals then described these contracts as “essentially
    continuous for-cause contracts that remain in effect until the employee is removed for
    cause, or until the employee is no longer ‘competent to discharge the duties of the office
    or efficient in the performance of them.’” 
    Spacesaver, 212 Md. App. at 442
    –43, 69 A.3d
    at 507 (quoting 
    Williams, 96 Md. at 238
    –39, 53 A. at 924). In this sense, the intermediate
    20
    appellate court held “continuous for-cause” contracts to be distinct from at-will,
    satisfaction,10 and lifetime employment contracts. 
    Id. at 443,
    69 A.3d at 507.
    As both a legal and terminological matter, “continuous for-cause” better describes
    the nature of Adam’s Employment Agreement than the term, “lifetime contract.” This
    Court has previously expressed its assumption that even a so-called “lifetime contract” only
    “continues to operate as long as the employer remains in the business and has work for the
    employee and the employee is able and willing to do his work satisfactorily and does not
    give good cause for his discharge.” Murray, 198 Md. at 
    533, 84 A.2d at 873
    . The same is
    true of Adam’s contract. Surely, Adam’s continued employment depended on, in addition
    to her compliance with the for-cause provisions listed in the Employment Agreement, the
    10
    A “satisfaction contract” is one “in which the employer, notwithstanding the
    inclusion of a durational term of employment, expressly reserves the right to terminate if
    it deems the employee’s performance unsatisfactory.” Towson Univ. v. Conte, 
    384 Md. 68
    , 77, 
    862 A.2d 941
    , 946 (2004). As we explained in Ferris v. Polansky:
    In a contract where the employer agrees to employ another as
    long as the services are satisfactory, the employer has the right
    to terminate the contract and discharge the employee,
    whenever he, the employer, acting in good faith is actually
    dissatisfied with the employee’s work. This applies, even
    though the parties to the employment contract have stipulated
    that the contract shall be operative during a definite term, if it
    provides that the services are to be performed to the satisfaction
    of the employer.
    
    191 Md. 79
    , 85–86, 
    59 A.2d 749
    , 752 (1948). We agree with the Court of Special Appeals’
    observation that a satisfaction contract without a durational term of employment is distinct
    from a lifetime employment contract terminable for cause. See Spacesaver, 
    212 Md. App. 422
    , 443 n.24, 
    69 A.3d 494
    , 507 n.24. In our view, the intermediate appellate court
    properly stated that under Maryland law, a trial court will evaluate an employer’s objective
    motivation for termination of a lifetime contract, whereas under a satisfaction contract, the
    jury must focus on the employer’s subjective motivation for termination.
    21
    continued success of SSI’s current business and its resulting need for Adam’s services.11
    We see that, to some extent, the so-called “lifetime contract” and “continuous for-cause”
    contract are similar, and do overlap.
    Yet in significant respects, Adam’s Employment Agreement is distinct from the
    alleged “lifetime employment” that was generally rejected by this Court.12 The cases in
    which this Court has wrestled with alleged lifetime employment have arisen from lower-
    level employees’ allegations that someone higher up in a company had given an oral
    representation that they would have a job “for life.” See, e.g., Pullman Co. v. Ray, 
    201 Md. 268
    , 271, 
    94 A.2d 266
    , 267 (1953) (alleged oral promise of lifetime employment in
    exchange for forbearance from suit); 
    Murray, 198 Md. at 530
    , 84 A.2d at 872 (alleged oral
    promise of lifetime employment in exchange for refraining from selling to previous
    customers for commissions); 
    King, 168 Md. at 143
    , 176 A. at 626 (“an alleged breach of
    an oral contract of the railroad company to employ the plaintiff for life, in consideration of
    11
    Surely SSI could change the nature of its business in a way that rendered Adam’s
    services superfluous, and therefore her employment would end. This would have to be
    done in good faith, for a legitimate business reason, and not with the motivating intent to
    rid the company of her services. See James J. O’Malley, “Cause of Action for Wrongful
    Discharge from Employment in Breach of Contract,” 18 Causes of Action 229, § 28 (1989)
    (collecting cases in which courts permitted discharge for legitimate business reasons such
    as economic difficulties requiring layoffs, employee’s department becoming obsolete, and
    closure of unprofitable plant).
    12
    Testimony at the trial court indicated that at least two of the siblings envisioned a
    lifetime tenure when they signed the Employment Agreement. Under the objective
    interpretation of contracts, the court will only look at extrinsic evidence if the contract is
    found to be ambiguous, a finding that, as we discuss infra, we disclaim here. See Sy-Lene
    of Wash., Inc. v. Starwood Urban Retail II, LLC, 
    376 Md. 157
    , 163, 
    829 A.2d 540
    , 544
    (2003).
    22
    his forbearance to sue on a claim for damages from injuries”); Heckler v. Balt. & O. R. Co.,
    
    167 Md. 226
    , 227, 
    173 A. 12
    , 13 (1934) (lifetime employment offered as part of a
    settlement for an employee’s injuries). These cases support the proposition that alleged
    oral contracts for continued employment stand on weaker ground than written contracts.
    Indeed, although a Maryland appellate case has expressly contemplated the potential that
    oral representations could support a “lifetime contract,”13 we have found no Maryland
    cases actually upholding such alleged oral contracts.
    A similar point has been expounded sagely by our sister court in Michigan, which
    stated:
    [T]his Court [has] recognized “the difficulty in verifying oral
    promises,” 
    Rowe, 437 Mich. at 641
    , 473 N.W.2d [at 273],
    especially in the employment relations context, because
    individuals often harbor “optimistic hope of a long
    relationship” that causes them to misinterpret their employer’s
    oral statements as manifestations of an intention to undertake
    a commitment in the form of a promise of job security. [Id. at
    
    640, 473 N.W.2d at 273
    ]. Accordingly, and in an effort to
    recognize oral contracts for job security only where the
    circumstances suggest both parties intended to be bound, 
    id. at 636,
    473 N.W.2d [at 271], the Rowe Court held that “oral
    statements of job security must be clear and unequivocal to
    overcome the presumption of employment at will.” 
    Id. at 645,
                       473 N.W.2d [at 275].
    Rood v. Gen. Dynamics Corp., 
    444 Mich. 107
    , 118–19, 
    507 N.W.2d 591
    , 598 (Mich. 1993).
    Our intermediate appellate court embraced the same wisdom when it observed that
    “[a] promise of permanent or lifetime employment may be
    nothing more than a casual aside. Or, it may be purely
    aspirational. The employer may be expressing his hope that a
    13
    See Yost v. Early, 
    87 Md. App. 364
    , 383, 
    589 A.2d 1291
    , 1300 (1991).
    23
    valued employee will stay with him forever. However, he may
    not have intended to create a binding agreement.”
    
    Spacesaver, 212 Md. App. at 444
    , 69 A.3d at 508 (alteration in original) (quoting Greene
    v. Oliver Realty, Inc., 
    363 Pa. Super. 534
    , 555, 
    526 A.2d 1192
    , 1202 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1987)).
    Based on the above considerations, we have held allegations of lifetime employment
    subject to a requirement of definiteness. 
    See supra
    ; see also Aberman v. Malden Mills
    Indus., Inc., 
    414 N.W.2d 769
    , 771 (Minn. Ct. App. 1987) (“Courts are reluctant to find a
    lifetime employment contract because such alleged contracts are often ‘oral,
    uncorroborated, vague in important details and highly improbable.’” (quoting Degen v.
    Investors Diversified Servs. Inc., 
    260 Minn. 424
    , 428–29, 
    110 N.W.2d 863
    , 866 (Minn.
    1961))).
    But unlike those cases involving alleged lifetime agreements, in which the lack of
    definiteness and “verifiability” inherent in oral representations justified a court’s
    skepticism, Adam’s Employment Agreement contained an express for-cause provision in
    writing. This provision, in concert with SSI’s failure to specify a term of employment on
    “Exhibit A,” cannot but be read to imply a continued period of employment. The
    Agreement’s operative terms are expressed—or in the case of the employment’s durational
    term, omitted—definitively. Therefore, the concerns over its accuracy, probability, and
    provenance are not present. The contract is clear, as is the fact that the parties assented to
    it.14 See Bracco v. Mich. Tech. Univ., 
    231 Mich. App. 578
    , 590, 
    588 N.W.2d 467
    , 473
    14
    While the trial court received conflicting evidence that some of the parties thought
    they were signing a contract providing for life employment, we need not address that
    24
    (Mich. Ct. App. 1998) (“[O]f central importance . . . is that the employee have “negotiated”
    . . . regarding job security. Of equal importance is that the employer agree to terminate
    only for cause.”) (emphasis in original) (footnote omitted). In this context, we refrain from
    imposing the additional requirement of special consideration, which evolved from a line of
    lifetime employment cases, to contracts of a “continuous for-cause” nature.15
    In drawing a distinction between lifetime and “continuous for-cause” contracts, we
    follow a path laid by other courts. As the United States District Court for the District of
    Nevada stated:
    Although employment generally is at-will, “an employer may
    expressly or impliedly agree with an employee that
    employment is to be for an indefinite term and may be
    terminated only for cause or only in accordance with
    established policies or procedures.” D’Angelo [v. Gardner,
    
    107 Nev. 704
    , 712, 
    819 P.2d 206
    , 211 (Nev. 1991)]; see also
    Martin [v. Sears, Roebuck and Co., 
    111 Nev. 923
    , 927, 
    899 P.2d 551
    , 554 (Nev. 1995)]. This is known as a “contract of
    continued employment.” D’Angelo, [107 Nev. at 
    712,] 819 P.2d at 211
    (quotation marks omitted). Additionally, an
    employer may bind itself to a term of lifetime employment if
    the parties expressly so agree, and consideration is given
    therefor.
    evidence if the contract itself provides an unambiguous answer. As we conclude, infra,
    the Employment Agreement is unambiguous and provides the answer.
    15
    We recognize that the concerns over corporate authority to execute a “continuous
    for-cause” contract and shareholders’ ability to change the management of the corporation
    could potentially arise in another case. That concern is not present here because the
    Employment Agreement was identical to the ones signed by the other two shareholders,
    and all shareholders and directors, including the corporate counsel who was a non-
    shareholder director, consented to the terms thereof.
    25
    Cundiff v. Dollar Loan Center LLC, 
    726 F. Supp. 2d 1232
    , 1237 (D. Nev. 2010); see also
    Pine River State Bank v. Mettille, 
    333 N.W.2d 622
    , 628 (Minn. 1983) (“If the parties
    choose to provide in their employment contract of an indefinite duration for provisions of
    job security, they should be able to do so.”).
    In so holding, we signal no retreat from our recognition and veneration of the
    employment at-will doctrine. This judgment in no way erodes that doctrine, as the
    presumption for at-will employment persists and is only defeated when the parties
    explicitly negotiate and provide for a definite term of employment or a clear for-cause
    provision. We emphasize that in this case, SSI’s corporate attorney could easily have kept
    Adam’s employment at-will by inserting an at-will provision in the Employment
    Agreement, or making sure that no for-cause provision made its way into the contract.
    We also reject any contention that the Employee Handbook should change our
    decision. The Employment Agreement states that SSI’s Employee Handbook governs “to
    the extent not described in this Employment Agreement[.]” It further states that “[i]n the
    event of a conflict between this Employment Agreement and the employees’ handbook or
    existing practices, the terms of this agreement shall govern.” We reject any argument that
    the two documents, read together, make clear that the contract could be terminated either
    26
    with or without cause.16 It would defy the plain language of the Employment Agreement
    to hold otherwise.17
    The same can be said for Petitioner’s argument that if the for-cause provision were
    meant to carry so much weight, the Employment Agreement would have authorized
    termination “only” for cause. The parties do not cite, and the Court has not found, any case
    holding that the inclusion of “may” in a for-cause provision defeats the purpose of that
    provision.18 This argument logically fails, and the trial court was right to reject it.
    16
    Even if for-cause language in an employee handbook could support a “continuous
    for-cause” employment agreement, we would carefully examine the handbook to see if
    other language therein was inconsistent with such conclusion. For example, if the
    handbook also stated that employment was at-will or expressly provided that the handbook
    was not a contract, we would consider that language as negating any claim that the
    handbook created “continuous for-cause” or lifetime employment. See Dell v. Montgomery
    Ward and Co., 
    811 F.2d 970
    , 972–73 (1987) (holding that at-will language in employee
    handbook stating that “[e]mployment . . . is for no definite period and may . . . be terminated
    at any time by the company or by an employee, with or without cause, and without any
    previous notice” prevailed over due process procedures provided in the same handbook)
    (emphasis in original); Castiglione v. Johns Hopkins Hosp., 
    69 Md. App. 325
    , 329, 
    517 A.2d 786
    , 787 (1986) (holding that at-will language in employee handbook stating “this
    handbook does not constitute an express or implied contract” prevailed over annual
    performance appraisals provided in the same handbook).
    17
    SSI’s argument that the for-cause provision was included in the Employment
    Agreement merely to help effectuate the mirror provisions in the Stock Purchase
    Agreement is not availing. SSI could easily have terminated Adam without including a
    for-cause provision in the Employment Agreement, as before Ellentuck’s revisions, the
    contract would have been at-will.
    18
    We are not aware of any record material that suggests Adam’s employment was
    subject to a for-cause provision, or was specified for a definite term, before the
    Employment Agreement was executed.
    27
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated above, we agree with the Court of Special Appeals that the
    Employment Agreement should not be interpreted as at-will employment. We distinguish
    this Employment Agreement from those alleged oral lifetime employment contracts that
    were consistently rejected by Maryland courts. It was a formal written employment
    contract executed by each of the three shareholders and did not lack for clarity in terms.
    We consider the best moniker for this type of contract to be “continuous for-cause”
    employment. We affirm the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals.
    JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF
    SPECIAL   APPEALS     AFFIRMED.
    COSTS TO BE PAID BY PETITIONER.
    28