Joel S. Lippman, M.D. v. Ethicon, Inc. (073324) ( 2015 )


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  •                                                      SYLLABUS
    (This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the
    convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please note that, in the
    interest of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized.)
    Joel S. Lippman, M.D. v. Ethicon, Inc. and Johnson & Johnson, Inc. (A-65/66-13) (073324)
    Argued January 20, 2015 -- Decided July 15, 2015
    LaVECCHIA, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
    In this appeal, the Court considers whether an employee, whose job duties entail knowing or securing
    compliance with a relevant standard of care and knowing when an employer’s actions or proposed actions deviate
    from that standard of care, may invoke the whistleblower protections afforded under N.J.S.A. 34:19-3 of the
    Conscientious Employee Protection Act (CEPA or Act), N.J.S.A. 34:19-1 to -14.
    Plaintiff Joel S. Lippman, M.D., was employed by defendant Ethicon, Inc., a subsidiary of defendant
    Johnson & Johnson, Inc., a manufacturer of medical devices used for surgical procedures, from July 2000 until his
    termination in May 2006. For the majority of his employment, plaintiff served as worldwide vice president of
    medical affairs and chief medical officer of Ethicon. He was responsible for safety, medical reviews, and medical
    writing. Plaintiff served on multiple internal review boards, including a quality board that was created to assess the
    health risks posed by Ethicon’s products and provide medical input regarding any necessary corrective measures
    with respect to their products in the field.
    On numerous occasions, plaintiff objected to the proposed or continued sale and distribution of certain
    Ethicon medical products on the basis that they were medically unsafe and that their sale violated various federal
    and state laws and regulations. In some instances, plaintiff opined that a particular product should not go to market,
    should be recalled, or that further research was necessary. Although he received “push back” from executives and
    other members of the boards whose interest and expertise aligned with Ethicon’s business priorities, Ethicon
    ultimately followed many of his recommendations. In April 2006, plaintiff advocated the recall of a particular
    product that he believed was dangerous, and it was eventually recalled in late April or early May 2006. On May 15,
    2006, Ethicon terminated plaintiff’s employment.
    Plaintiff filed a complaint alleging, in part, that his employment was terminated due to his whistleblowing
    activities, which he identified as his actions in reporting a number of products as dangerous and in violation of the
    federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, and advising that defendants either recall the products or perform further
    research. Ethicon asserted that plaintiff was terminated as a result of an inappropriate relationship with someone
    who worked in a department under his authority. The trial court granted defendants’ summary judgment motion,
    dismissing plaintiff’s CEPA action. Relying on Massarano v. New Jersey Transit, 
    400 N.J. Super. 474
     (App. Div.
    2008), the court concluded that, because plaintiff admitted it was his job to bring forth issues regarding drug and
    product safety, he failed to show that he performed a whistleblowing activity protected by CEPA.
    Plaintiff appealed, and the Appellate Division reversed in a published decision. Lippman v. Ethicon, Inc.,
    
    432 N.J. Super. 378
     (App. Div. 2013). The panel rejected the trial court’s interpretation of protected whistleblowing
    conduct under N.J.S.A. 34:19-3(c), finding that it was inconsistent with the broad remedial purposes of CEPA. The
    panel noted that watchdog employees like plaintiff are the most vulnerable to retaliation because they routinely
    speak out when corporate profits are put ahead of consumer safety, and CEPA’s definition of an eligible employee
    does not limit protection based on job title or function. However, when addressing the standard for establishing a
    prima facie CEPA claim, the panel articulated an additional requirement for watchdog employees. Specifically,
    unless a watchdog employee refused to participate in the objectionable employer conduct, the employee must
    demonstrate that he or she pursued and exhausted all internal means of securing compliance. This Court granted
    defendants’ petition for certification and plaintiff’s cross-petition. 
    217 N.J. 292
     (2014).
    HELD: CEPA’s protections extend to the performance of regular job duties by watchdog employees. Unless and
    until the Legislature expresses its intent to differentiate among the classes of employees who are entitled to CEPA
    protection, there can be no additional burden imposed on watchdog employees seeking CEPA protection.
    1. In order to determine whether plaintiff is entitled to bring a CEPA cause of action, the Court must construe
    CEPA’s language. In addressing this question of the Act’s meaning, the Court’s review is de novo. CEPA is
    remedial legislation entitled to liberal construction, with the purposes of protecting whistleblowers from retaliation
    by employers and discouraging employers from engaging in illegal or unethical workplace activities. N.J.S.A.
    34:19-3 establishes the types of whistleblowing activity for which “an employer shall not take any retaliatory action
    against an employee.” An “employee,” as defined by N.J.S.A. 34:19-2(b), is “any individual who performs services
    for and under the control and direction of an employer for wages or other remuneration.” (pp. 21-25)
    2. Turning to the question of whether watchdog employees like plaintiff are entitled to CEPA protection, the Court
    notes that CEPA’s plain language does not define employees protected by the Act as inclusive of only those with
    certain job functions. Moreover, New Jersey case law has extended the reach of N.J.S.A. 34:19-2(b), not restricted
    it. There is no support in CEPA’s definition of an “employee” to preclude its protection of watchdog employees.
    Restricting CEPA’s protection to a discrete class of employees would contravene two principles of statutory
    construction, namely that courts may not engraft language that the Legislature has not chosen to include in a statute
    and that remedial legislation should be liberally construed. (pp. 26-27)
    3. The Court rejects defendants’ argument that watchdog employees must be acting outside the scope of their job
    duties in order to engage in CEPA-protected conduct under N.J.S.A. 34:19-3(c), which requires that a plaintiff
    “[o]bject[] to or refuse[] to participate in any activity, policy or practice. . . .” The plain meaning of the word
    “object” does not support defendants’ interpretation. Given that remedial legislation should be liberally construed, it
    would be wholly incongruent to strain the normal definition of “object” into some implicit requirement that limits a
    class of employee to whistleblower protection only for actions taken outside of normal job duties. This conclusion
    is further supported by subsection (c)’s corollary phrase “refuse[] to participate,” which implies that CEPA-
    protected conduct can occur within the course of an employee’s normal job duties. Furthermore, since neither
    subsection (a) nor (b) of N.J.S.A. 34:19-3 states or suggests that an employee must be acting outside of his or her
    usual duties to merit protection, it is inexplicable to assume that the Legislature would intend an implicit “job
    duties” exception excluding watchdog employees under subsection (c). (pp. 27-32)
    4. To the extent that defendants and the trial court relied on Massarano v. New Jersey Transit, 
    400 N.J. Super. 474
    (App. Div. 2008), for the proposition that watchdog employees are only entitled to CEPA protection if acting
    outside of the scope of their jobs, the Court finds that this argument lacks solid foundation. Although Massarano
    contains language suggesting that a plaintiff who reports conduct as part of his or her job is not entitled to CEPA
    protection, the analysis in that case is premised on the conclusion that the defendants did not retaliate against the
    plaintiff for reporting the disposal of documents. Thus, reliance on Massarano for recognition of a job-duties
    exception to CEPA’s broad protection to employees misperceives the case’s essential finding of no retaliation and
    overextends its significance. The Court specifically disapproves of any such extrapolation from the Massarano
    judgment. Significantly, decisions of this Court have indicated only a contrary approach to CEPA coverage for
    individuals in positions of responsibility for corporate compliance with law and public policy. In sum, there is no
    support in CEPA’s language, construction, or its application in this Court’s case law for the conclusion that
    watchdog employees are stripped of whistleblower protection due to their position or because they are performing
    their regular job duties. (pp. 32-35)
    5. Although the Court agrees with the Appellate Division’s finding that watchdog employees are entitled to CEPA
    protection when performing their ordinary job duties, it disagrees with the panel’s reformulation of the elements
    required to establish a prima facie CEPA claim, as set forth in Dzwonar v. McDevitt, 
    177 N.J. 451
    , 462 (2003). The
    panel’s requirement that watchdog employees demonstrate pursuit and exhaustion of all internal means of securing
    compliance is incompatible with prior precedent and imposes an obligation nowhere found in the statutory language.
    Where the Legislature intended to impose an exhaustion requirement, it has said so clearly. Consequently, the Court
    modifies the Appellate Division judgment to the extent that it imposed an exhaustion requirement not supported by
    the statute’s terms. CEPA imposes no additional requirements on watchdog employees bringing a CEPA claim
    unless and until the Legislature expresses its intent that such employees meet a special or heightened burden. (pp.
    35-38)
    The judgment of the Appellate Division is AFFIRMED, as MODIFIED, and the matter is REMANDED
    for further proceedings consistent with the Court’s opinion.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES ALBIN, FERNANDEZ-VINA and SOLOMON join in
    JUSTICE LaVECCHIA’s opinion. JUSTICE PATTERSON and JUDGE CUFF (temporarily assigned) did
    not participate.
    2
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    A-65/66 September Term 2013
    073324
    JOEL S. LIPPMAN, M.D.,
    Plaintiff-Respondent
    and Cross-Appellant,
    v.
    ETHICON, INC. and JOHNSON &
    JOHNSON, INC.,
    Defendants-Appellants
    and Cross-Respondents.
    Argued January 20, 2015 – Decided July 15, 2015
    On certification to the Superior Court,
    Appellate Division, whose opinion is
    reported at 
    432 N.J. Super. 378
     (App. Div.
    2013).
    Francis X. Dee argued the cause for
    appellants and cross-plaintiffs (McElroy,
    Deutsch, Mulvaney & Carpenter, attorneys;
    Mr. Dee and Stephen F. Payerle, on the
    briefs).
    Bruce P. McMoran argued the cause for
    plaintiff and cross-appellant (McMoran,
    O’Connor & Bramley, attorneys; Mr. McMoran
    and Michael F. O’Connor, on the briefs).
    Adam N. Saravay argued the cause for amici
    curiae New Jersey Business & Industry
    Association, New Jersey Civil Justice
    Institute, Employers Association of New
    Jersey, New Jersey Defense Association and
    New Jersey Management Attorneys, Inc.
    (McCarter & English, Proskauer Rose,
    Gibbons, and Drinker Biddle & Reath,
    attorneys; Mr. Saravay, David R. Kott,
    Christopher S. Mayer, Mark A. Saloman,
    1
    Daniel L. Saperstein, Allana M. Grinshteyn,
    Nicholas M. Tamburri, Joseph J. Sarno,
    Natalie H. Mantell, Michelle M. Bufano,
    Michelle G. Haas, John A. Ridley, and
    Lawrence J. Del Rossi, of counsel and on the
    briefs).
    Andrew W. Dwyer argued the cause for amici
    curiae The New Jersey Work Environment
    Council, The New Jersey State Industrial
    Union Council, and 25 other environmental,
    labor, consumer and community organizations,
    and The New Jersey Association for Justice
    (The Dwyer Law Firm, Law Office of Bennett
    D. Zurofsky, and Schiffman, Abraham, Kaufman
    & Ritter, attorneys; Evan L. Goldman, of
    counsel; Mr. Dwyer, Mr. Zurofsky, Mr.
    Goldman, and Kristen Welsh Ragon on the
    briefs).
    JUSTICE LaVECCHIA delivered the opinion of the Court.
    Cross-petitions for certification were granted in this
    matter to address issues related to the application of the
    Conscientious Employee Protection Act (CEPA or Act), N.J.S.A.
    34:19-1 to -14, to so-called “watchdog” employees.   More
    specifically, both petitions concern whether an employee, whose
    job duties entail knowing or securing compliance with a relevant
    standard of care and knowing when an employer’s actions or
    proposed actions deviate from that standard of care, may invoke
    the whistleblower protections afforded under N.J.S.A. 34:19-3 of
    CEPA.
    Plaintiff’s normal job duties included providing his
    medical opinion about the safety of defendant pharmaceutical
    company’s products.   After he was terminated from his high-level
    2
    position with the corporation, he filed this CEPA action
    claiming that his employer retaliated against him.       The trial
    court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the
    ground that plaintiff’s performance of his regular job duties
    could not constitute CEPA-protected conduct.        The Appellate
    Division reversed, concluding that watchdog employees are among
    those most in need of CEPA’s protection, and that the plain
    language of the statute does not exempt from protection conduct
    that constitutes a job duty.   Lippman v. Ethicon, Inc., 
    432 N.J. Super. 378
    , 406-08 (App. Div. 2013).       In so holding, the panel
    also articulated a tailored standard for evaluating CEPA claims
    asserted by watchdog employees.       
    Id. at 410
    .
    According to plaintiff, the Appellate Division’s standard,
    in effect, raised the bar for the proof that such employees must
    present in order to establish a prima facie CEPA claim because
    it requires demonstration that the employee either refused to
    participate in the objectionable conduct or pursued and
    exhausted all internal means of securing compliance.
    Plaintiff’s petition focuses on whether the Appellate Division
    improperly added an element to his CEPA-authorized cause of
    action, thereby subjecting watchdog employees to a different and
    heightened burden compared to other CEPA plaintiffs.
    Defendants’ petition allows this Court to review the Appellate
    Division’s published decision holding that performance of job
    3
    duties by a watchdog employee may constitute CEPA-protected
    activity.
    For the reasons that follow, we affirm the Appellate
    Division’s judgment that CEPA’s protections extend to the
    performance of regular job duties1 by watchdog employees.      In so
    holding, we disapprove of the standard that the panel
    articulated for assessing claims by such employees.       The panel’s
    attempt to add clarity to the assessment of claims by such
    plaintiffs impermissibly results in adding to the burden for
    this subset of CEPA plaintiffs.       By its very terms, the
    statutory cause of action created by CEPA applies equally to all
    employees.   There is no evidence of legislative intent to have
    the Act operate any other way.    Accordingly, we hold that there
    can be no additional burden imposed on watchdog employees
    seeking CEPA protection, unless and until the Legislature
    expresses its intent to differentiate among the classes of
    employees who are entitled to CEPA protection.
    I.
    A.
    This matter arose upon the filing of plaintiff’s complaint
    in the Law Division against Ethicon, Inc. (Ethicon) and Johnson
    1 We refer to this concept in various ways -- including regular,
    normal, and usual job duties; prescribed duties; and core job
    functions -- as defendants have in this matter.
    4
    & Johnson, Inc. (J&J) (collectively defendants), alleging CEPA
    violations under N.J.S.A. 34:19-3(a) and (c).   Plaintiff Joel S.
    Lippman, M.D.,2 alleged in his complaint, among other claims,
    that his employment was terminated due to his whistleblowing
    activities, which plaintiff identified as his actions in
    reporting a number of products as dangerous and in violation of
    the federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, 
    21 U.S.C.A. §§ 301
    -
    399f, and advising that defendants either recall the products or
    perform further research.3   This appeal comes to us on a summary
    judgment record; accordingly, we review the facts in the light
    most favorable to plaintiff, the non-moving party in this
    matter.   Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., 
    142 N.J. 520
    ,
    523, 540 (1995).   The facts are set forth below as presented by
    the parties and as described by the Appellate Division, Lippman,
    supra, 432 N.J. Super. at 382-405.
    Plaintiff was employed at Ethicon, a manufacturer of
    medical devices used for surgical procedures, from July 2000
    2 Plaintiff has a bachelor’s degree in biology from New York
    University, a medical degree from New York Medical College, and
    a master’s degree in public health from Harvard University
    School of Public Health.
    3 Plaintiff also alleged that he was terminated because of his
    age, in violation of the Law Against Discrimination, N.J.S.A.
    10:5-12(a); however, he voluntarily dismissed that claim after
    the trial court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment
    on plaintiff’s CEPA claim.
    5
    until his termination.    Prior to his work at Ethicon, he worked
    from 1990 to 2000 at Ortho-McNeil Pharmaceutical (OMP), as
    director of medical services and then vice president of clinical
    trials.    Both Ethicon and OMP are subsidiaries of J&J.
    Initially plaintiff served at Ethicon as vice president of
    medical affairs.     In 2002, he was promoted to worldwide vice
    president of medical affairs and chief medical officer of
    Ethicon.   His direct superior and the person to whom he reported
    at Ethicon was Dennis Longstreet, the company group chairperson.
    Longstreet reported to Michael J. Dormer, J&J’s chairperson for
    the medical devices and diagnostic group.    In 2005, Sherilyn S.
    McCoy replaced Longstreet as Ethicon’s company group
    chairperson.
    As vice president of medical affairs, “plaintiff was
    ‘responsible for safety, ensuring that safe medical practices
    occurred in clinical trials of [Ethicon’s] products; . . .
    medical reviews, information from a medical standpoint; [and]
    medical writing.’”    Lippman, supra, 432 N.J. Super. at 388
    (alterations in original).    Consistent with those
    responsibilities, plaintiff served on multiple internal review
    boards for Ethicon.     Generally stated, those boards addressed
    strategic product activities and evaluated the health and safety
    risks of products.    As a member of those boards, plaintiff’s
    function was to provide medical and clinical expertise and
    6
    opinions.   Id. at 388-90.   In short, Lippman was part of
    Ethicon’s high-level policy decision making.
    Of particular relevance in this matter, plaintiff was a
    member of a quality board that “was created to assess the health
    risks posed by Ethicon’s products and to provide ‘medical input’
    in determining whether the company needed to take corrective
    measures with respect to their products in the field.”       Id. at
    389.   At times, recall of a product would become “necessary to
    conform to the requirements of the particular regulatory agency
    with jurisdiction, internal policy directives, and/or to protect
    the health and safety of the patient[s].”     Ibid.   The quality
    board could also take other types of actions, such as
    “correcting a product in the field.”     As structured within
    Ethicon’s organization, the quality board was to be accorded
    “‘the final say’” in deciding whether to take corrective action
    regarding a product, “even in the absence of a directive from a
    governmental agency.”    Ibid.   The quality board’s membership
    included the head of research and development, the chief
    financial officer, the head of operations, and the vice
    president of quality and regulatory affairs.       Members of the
    quality board were “expected to express their view points from
    their” area of knowledge or expertise.     Ibid.
    Plaintiff claims numerous instances in which he, in his
    role on the internal review boards generally, and specifically
    7
    the quality board, objected to the proposed or continued sale
    and distribution of certain Ethicon medical products.      The
    Appellate Division opinion recounts many in detail.     See id. at
    390-403.   Those instances, as summarized, reflect that
    plaintiff’s objections were based on his opinion that the
    products were medically unsafe and that their sale violated
    various federal and state laws and regulations.   Thus, plaintiff
    voiced concerns about the safety of various products and his
    opinion, in some instances, that the particular product under
    discussion should not go to market, that it should be recalled,
    or that further research was necessary.    Plaintiff claims, and
    the record contains support, that plaintiff received “push back”
    from other members of these boards and executives whose interest
    and expertise aligned with the business priorities of Ethicon.
    Needless to say, the committees were comprised of professionals
    with their own judgments and opinions on the subjects under
    discussion.   Certainly, in this record, factual disputes exist
    as to precisely what plaintiff, other board members, and
    executives at Ethicon said and did during these disagreements.
    Moreover, the record also indicates that Ethicon ultimately
    followed many of plaintiff’s recommendations.
    In April 2006, plaintiff was advocating the recall of DFK-
    24, a product he believed was dangerous.   Other Ethicon
    executives were resistant to recalling the product, but Ethicon
    8
    eventually did so in late April or early May 2006.       On May 15,
    2006, Ethicon terminated plaintiff’s employment.       According to
    McCoy’s deposition testimony, “‘Dr. Lippman was terminated
    because he had a relationship, an inappropriate relationship,
    with someone who worked directly for him.’”       Id. at 404.   Based
    on the record before us, “the alleged relationship came to
    McCoy’s attention when an employee, who was unsatisfied with the
    performance rating he believed plaintiff had given him,
    mentioned [the relationship] to McCoy as a possible explanation
    or motive for plaintiff’s alleged unfair assessment of his work
    performance.”   Ibid.   McCoy acknowledged that plaintiff’s
    purported romantic partner “was an employee in a department
    under plaintiff’s authority during part of the alleged
    relationship, but “she did not directly report to plaintiff at
    any time.”   Ibid.   Further, McCoy admitted that she did not know
    of “any prior case in which an Ethicon or J&J employee was
    terminated (or even disciplined) for having a consensual
    romantic relationship with an alleged subordinate,” and she was
    unaware of any written J&J policy “prohibiting the type of
    consensual romantic relationship that allegedly occurred between
    plaintiff and the employee.”   Id. at 404-05.
    B.
    Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment, seeking to
    dismiss plaintiff’s CEPA action.       The trial court granted the
    9
    motion.   The court relied, in part, on the prior Appellate
    Division decision in Massarano v. New Jersey Transit, 
    400 N.J. Super. 474
     (App. Div. 2008), in concluding that, because
    plaintiff admitted “it was his job to bring forth issues
    regarding the safety of drugs and products,” he “failed to show
    that he performed a whistle-blowing activity” protected by CEPA.
    The court denied plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration.
    Plaintiff appealed, and the Appellate Division reversed in
    a published decision.   Lippman, supra, 
    432 N.J. Super. 378
    .      The
    panel rejected the trial court’s interpretation of protected
    whistleblowing conduct under N.J.S.A. 34:19-3(c), which the
    trial court held precluded a plaintiff who “[o]bjects to[] or
    refuses to participate in” employer behavior as part of his or
    her job duties from entitlement to protection under CEPA.        See
    
    id. at 381, 406-07, 409-10
    .   The panel found the trial court’s
    construction of the statute to be inconsistent with the broad
    remedial purposes of CEPA.    See 
    id. at 381, 406-07
    .   To the
    extent that such a reading was implicitly espoused or endorsed
    in Massarano, the Lippman panel expressly declined to follow it.
    
    Id. at 381-82, 406
    .
    In emphasizing the incongruity of a construction that cuts
    out watchdog employees from CEPA’s remedial protective purpose,
    the panel noted especially that watchdog employees are the most
    vulnerable to retaliation because they are “uniquely positioned
    10
    to know where the problem areas are and to speak out when
    corporate profits are put ahead of consumer safety.”    
    Id. at 406-07
    .   As further support that job duties are not outcome
    determinative in a CEPA claim, the panel noted that CEPA’s
    definition of an “employee” eligible for the Act’s protection is
    broad and does not limit protection based on job title or
    function.   
    Id.
     at 407 (citing N.J.S.A. 34:19-2(b)).
    Under the panel’s interpretation of protected
    whistleblowing conduct, “[i]f an individual’s job is to protect
    the public from exposure to dangerous defective medical
    products, CEPA does not permit the employer to retaliate against
    that individual because of his or her performance of duties in
    good faith, and consistent with the job description.”     
    Id. at 410
    .   Applying that approach to the case at hand, the panel
    found that genuine issues of material fact existed and held that
    plaintiff had pled facts sufficient for a rational jury to find
    that defendants violated CEPA when they terminated his
    employment.   See 
    id. at 382, 408-09
    .
    Importantly, the Appellate Division proceeded to articulate
    a “paradigm” for a prima facie CEPA cause of action for
    employees who perform watchdog activities.    The panel built from
    a model set forth by this Court in Dzwonar v. McDevitt, 
    177 N.J. 451
    , 462 (2003), and defined a watchdog employee as an “employee
    who, by virtue of his or her duties and responsibilities, is in
    11
    the best position to:   (1) know the relevant standard of care;
    and (2) know when an employer’s proposed plan or course of
    action would violate or materially deviate from that standard of
    care.”   Lippman, supra, 432 N.J. Super. at 410.    The panel then
    instructed that in order for a watchdog employee to present a
    prima facie CEPA claim, the employee must demonstrate the
    following elements:
    First, the employee must establish that he or
    she reasonably believed that the employer’s
    conduct was violating either a law, government
    regulation, or a clear mandate of public
    policy. Second, the employee must establish
    that he or she refused to participate or
    objected to this unlawful conduct, and
    advocated compliance with the relevant legal
    standards to the employer or to those
    designated by the employer with the authority
    and responsibility to comply.    To be clear,
    this second element requires a plaintiff to
    show he or she either (a) pursued and
    exhausted all internal means of securing
    compliance; or (b) refused to participate in
    the objectionable conduct.        Third, the
    employee must establish that he or she
    suffered an adverse employment action.     And
    fourth, the employee must establish a causal
    connection between these activities and the
    adverse employment action.
    [Ibid. (second emphasis added).]
    Although this four-prong test largely tracks the standard
    for a prima facie CEPA claim that this Court articulated in
    Dzwonar, 
    supra,
     
    177 N.J. at 462
    , the language emphasized above
    is not part of the Dzwonar test.     As the panel’s holding
    recognized, under this additional requirement, unless a watchdog
    12
    employee refused to participate in the conduct, such an employee
    must demonstrate that he or she “pursued and exhausted all
    internal means of securing compliance.”     Lippman, supra, 432
    N.J. Super. at 410.
    As noted, this Court granted the petition and cross-
    petition filed in this matter.    Lippman v. Ethicon, Inc., 
    217 N.J. 292
     (2014).
    II.
    A.
    1.
    In support of their petition, defendants assert that the
    Appellate Division erred in holding that protected activity
    under CEPA extends to watchdog employees’ regular job
    responsibilities.     They advance a three-prong argument:   (1) the
    statutory language of CEPA does not support the Appellate
    Division’s broad holding; (2) the Appellate Division’s holding
    contravenes previous appellate decisions; and (3) the holding
    adversely impacts the “balance between the scope of protected
    activity and the ability of employers to properly run their
    business.”
    First, defendants argue that CEPA’s language limits
    protected activity to an employee’s conduct that is in
    opposition to the employer.    Specifically, defendants contend
    that the “objects to” clause, which provides that employees must
    13
    “object[] to, or refuse[] to participate in any activity, policy
    or practice” of the employer to receive CEPA protection,
    N.J.S.A. 34:19-3(c), indicates that the statute protects only
    employee activity that goes beyond the scope of the employee’s
    job responsibilities.   According to defendants, “[t]he employee
    logically cannot . . . object[] or refuse[] to participate in
    the very activity, policy or practice that he or she is helping
    to formulate on behalf of the organization.”   Applying their
    construction to the matter at hand, defendants argue that all of
    plaintiff’s alleged whistleblowing activities were in accordance
    with his job responsibilities and, therefore, cannot be in
    opposition to the employer as they argue the “objects to”
    language requires.   Defendants add that Ethicon heeded some of
    plaintiff’s recommendations while he was on the quality board,
    and that plaintiff never reported any of defendants’ putative
    violations to outside authorities.   Defendants maintain that
    Ethicon terminated plaintiff’s employment because of his
    relationship with a subordinate, not as a retaliatory measure.
    Second, in respect of the assertion that the Appellate
    Division’s holding is inconsistent with prior precedent,
    defendants point to Massarano, supra, where, according to
    defendants, an Appellate Division panel maintained that an
    employee who reports conduct as part of his or her job duties is
    not protected under CEPA.   
    400 N.J. Super. at 491
    .   Defendants
    14
    assert that six unpublished Appellate Division decisions and
    several federal district court cases follow the Massarano
    decision.   Accordingly, defendants argue that Massarano and its
    progeny should have prevented the appellate panel in this matter
    from broadly reading CEPA to include job responsibilities as
    protected activity under the Act.
    Finally, defendants advance a policy argument.    They
    contend that the Appellate Division’s decision upsets the
    employee-employer balance between the scope of protected
    employee activity and the ability of employers to effectively
    run their businesses.   Defendants rely on Pierce v. Ortho
    Pharmaceutical Corp., 
    84 N.J. 58
    , 71 (1980), for the proposition
    that protected activity should not interfere with a business’s
    internal operations.    Defendants argue that the appellate
    holding in this case is at odds with that principle because it
    will interfere with employers’ ability to make lawful and
    justifiable personnel decisions about watchdog employees who
    make erroneous or overly conservative judgments.    According to
    defendants, the Appellate Division’s decision in this matter
    creates a class of employees against whom an employer cannot
    take an adverse employment action without risking CEPA
    liability, and it incentivizes employers to no longer entrust
    employees with critical matters of legal compliance or public
    safety.
    15
    2.
    In response to plaintiff’s cross-petition for
    certification, defendants continue to maintain that the
    Appellate Division erred in expanding the scope of protection
    under CEPA and further argue that plaintiff seeks to amplify
    that error by removing an essential element of whistleblowing,
    namely, showing that plaintiff objected by exhausting all
    internal means.   Defendants urge this Court to adopt a
    construction of the “objects to” clause that will require
    watchdog employees to exhaustively escalate an issue when
    seeking to compel compliance with law or clear public policy in
    order for an employee’s conduct to be deemed protected activity
    under CEPA.   Consistent with that position, defendants contend
    that the Appellate Division simply was tailoring the statute to
    the particular case, not imposing a higher burden on watchdog
    employees.    They also contend that any reliance on Fleming v.
    Correctional Healthcare Solutions, Inc., 
    164 N.J. 90
     (2000), is
    misplaced because that case did not analyze the language or
    scope of CEPA.
    B.
    1.
    Plaintiff argues in support of the Appellate Division
    holding that CEPA-protected conduct can include the ordinary job
    duties of watchdog employees.    Countering defendants’ three-
    16
    prong argument, plaintiff first relies on the plain language of
    CEPA, which plaintiff asserts unambiguously extends protection
    to all employees and is silent on any job-duty exception when
    defining protected whistleblowing conduct.   Plaintiff contends
    that the plain language best indicates the Legislature’s intent.
    Second, plaintiff argues that the Appellate Division’s
    holding does not conflict with Massarano or its progeny.
    According to plaintiff, Massarano held that the plaintiff’s CEPA
    claim failed because she did not establish that she reasonably
    believed that her employer violated a clear mandate of public
    policy or that her employer acted with a retaliatory motive in
    terminating her employment.   Plaintiff maintains that
    defendants’ misreading of Massarano stems from a single line of
    dictum that is taken out of context.   Moreover, plaintiff is
    dismissive of Massarano’s “progeny” because those cases are
    unpublished and have no precedential value, are factually
    distinct, or fail to engage in a statutory analysis.     Plaintiff
    also asserts that this Court already has declined to add a “job
    duties” exception to CEPA-protected conduct when it did not
    acknowledge such an exception in Donelson v. DuPont Chambers
    Works, 
    206 N.J. 243
    , 256-57 (2011).
    Finally, in respect of defendants’ policy argument,
    plaintiff contends that the Appellate Division’s holding strikes
    the proper balance between employee protection and an employer’s
    17
    effective running of its business.    As plaintiff argues,
    watchdog employees protect employers from themselves by
    deterring employer wrongdoing.   Moreover, plaintiff maintains
    that watchdog employees are often the only safeguard between
    profit-driven corporations and an unknowing public.   Adopting a
    “job duties” exception, plaintiff argues, would weaken CEPA
    because watchdog employees would have no legal protections, thus
    eliminating the curb against “the corporate evils CEPA was
    intended to prevent.”   According to plaintiff, a job-duties
    exception would unduly complicate CEPA claims by requiring
    factfinders to determine whether a plaintiff’s alleged protected
    conduct fell within his or her normal job duties.
    2.
    On the issue raised in his cross-petition, plaintiff argues
    that although the Appellate Division correctly interpreted the
    scope of CEPA to include watchdog employees, it erred in
    imposing a requirement that those employees must exhaust all
    internal means of compliance.    Plaintiff asserts that such a
    requirement is inconsistent with the plain language of CEPA for
    the simple but forceful reason that the statute does not
    distinguish among types of employees.
    Rather, plaintiff contends that the Legislature intended
    for CEPA to have a broad scope and to allow any whistleblower
    employee to bring a retaliation claim.    He points to decisions
    18
    of our Court to support that intention.   Specifically, plaintiff
    argues that the panel’s new requirement violates this Court’s
    holding in Dzwonar, supra, 
    177 N.J. at 462
    , which established
    the elements for a prima facie case of retaliatory action under
    CEPA.   Further, plaintiff maintains that the appellate panel’s
    added requirement for a watchdog employee to establish a prima
    facie CEPA claim is at odds with Fleming, 
    supra,
     
    164 N.J. at 97
    ,
    wherein the Court rejected the argument that an employer could
    require an employee to exhaust the employer’s internal complaint
    procedure prior to qualifying for CEPA protection.
    C.
    Amici Employers Association of New Jersey (EANJ), Academy
    of New Jersey Management Attorneys (ANJMA), New Jersey Business
    & Industry Association and New Jersey Civil Justice Institute
    (collectively NJBIA), and the New Jersey Defense Association
    (NJDA) reinforce defendants’ argument that CEPA does not protect
    employees acting within the scope of their employment.    We do
    not repeat their arguments except to note a few points.
    EANJ emphasizes that employees should be required to
    respect the demands of the employer, unless those demands are
    unlawful.   ANJMA argues in favor of a higher standard for
    watchdog employees to qualify for CEPA protection if they are to
    be eligible for such protection at all.   NJBIA views the instant
    matter as presenting the question of whether CEPA protection
    19
    should be expanded, which it argues should be an issue for the
    legislative branch, not the Judiciary.   Finally, NJDA highlights
    federal and state laws regulating product liability and argues
    that compliance with those provisions requires exclusion of
    watchdog employees performing job duties from CEPA protection.
    Amici New Jersey Association for Justice (NJAJ), as well as
    New Jersey Work Environment Council, New Jersey State Industrial
    Union Council, and twenty-five other environmental, labor,
    consumer, and community organizations (collectively NJWEC),
    support plaintiff’s contention that CEPA protects employees’ job
    responsibilities.   We do not repeat all of their arguments
    either except to note the following.
    NJWEC maintains that CEPA’s language of “objects to[] or
    refuses to participate in,” in the opening clause of N.J.S.A.
    34:19-3(c), reinforces plaintiff’s position because an employee
    would never be expected to participate in an activity unless it
    fell within his or her job duties in the first place.    It
    provides multiple textual and statutory construction bases for
    rejecting any exception for watchdog employees from CEPA
    protection under N.J.S.A. 34:19-3(c).    NJWEC also cites to
    whistleblower statutes in other states that extend protections
    to watchdog employees.   Further, NJWEC notes that the additional
    exhaustion requirement imposed on watchdog employees under the
    Appellate Division’s opinion exceeds the notice requirement to
    20
    employees that the Legislature expressly imposed for other
    subsections of N.J.S.A. 34:19-3.     NJAJ addresses defendants’
    policy arguments -- about the negative consequences of reading
    CEPA to protect the job duties of watchdog employees -- by
    noting that those employees remain obligated to bear the burden
    of establishing a prima facie case of retaliatory action.
    III.
    In determining whether plaintiff is entitled to bring his
    CEPA cause of action or, conversely, whether defendants should
    be entitled to summary judgment based on their assertion that
    plaintiff is not entitled to whistleblower protection for
    performing his normal watchdog job duties, we must construe
    CEPA’s language.   In addressing this question of the Act’s
    meaning, the appellate review is de novo.     See Hodges v. Sasil
    Corp., 
    189 N.J. 210
    , 220-21 (2007) (citing Balsamides v.
    Protameen Chems., Inc., 
    160 N.J. 352
    , 372 (1999)).
    The Legislature enacted CEPA in 1986.     L. 1986, c. 105.
    The Act is considered remedial legislation entitled to liberal
    construction, its public policy purpose to protect
    whistleblowers from retaliation by employers having been long
    recognized by the courts of this State.     Abbamont v. Piscataway
    Twp. Bd. of Educ., 
    138 N.J. 405
    , 431 (1994);4 see, e.g.,
    4 As explained in Abbamont, 
    supra,
     CEPA is entitled to liberal
    construction, in part stemming from subsequent legislative
    21
    Donelson, 
    supra,
     
    206 N.J. at 257-58
     (noting CEPA’s liberal
    construction in light of its “broad remedial purpose”); Dzwonar,
    
    supra,
     
    177 N.J. at 463
     (quoting Abbamont, 
    supra,
     
    138 N.J. at 431
    ) (same); Estate of Roach v. TRW, Inc., 
    164 N.J. 598
    , 610
    (2000) (quoting Barratt v. Cushman & Wakefield of N.J., Inc.,
    
    144 N.J. 120
    , 127 (1996)) (same).     After nearly two decades of
    implementation, it is beyond dispute that the legislative
    purpose animating CEPA is, as expressed initially in Abbamont,
    
    supra,
     to “protect and encourage employees to report illegal or
    unethical workplace activities and to discourage public and
    private sector employers from engaging in such conduct.”     
    138 N.J. at 431
    .    We thus turn to the specific language of CEPA at
    issue in this matter.
    N.J.S.A. 34:19-3 establishes that whistleblowing activity
    is protected from employer retaliation.     In relevant part, it
    provides:
    An   employer   shall    not   take   any
    retaliatory action against an employee because
    the employee does any of the following
    [protected activities]:
    a. Discloses, or threatens to disclose to a
    supervisor or to a public body an activity,
    policy or practice of the employer, or another
    employer, with whom there is a business
    commentary indicating that CEPA’s remedies were meant to be so
    construed. 
    138 N.J. at
    431 (citing Judiciary, Law & Public
    Safety Committee, Statement on Assembly Bills No. 2872, 2118,
    2228 (1990)).
    22
    relationship,   that   the   employee   reasonably
    believes:
    (1) is in violation of a law, or a rule
    or regulation promulgated pursuant to
    law, . . . or, in the case of an employee
    who is a licensed or certified health
    care professional, reasonably believes
    constitutes improper quality of patient
    care; or
    (2) is fraudulent or criminal . . . ;
    b. Provides information to, or testifies
    before,   any  public  body   conducting  an
    investigation, hearing or inquiry into any
    violation of law, or a rule or regulation .
    . . ; or
    c. Objects to, or refuses to participate in
    any activity, policy or practice which the
    employee reasonably believes:
    (1) is in violation of a law, or a rule
    or regulation promulgated pursuant to
    law, . . . or, if the employee is a
    licensed   or  certified   health   care
    professional,    constitutes    improper
    quality of patient care;
    (2) is fraudulent or criminal . . . ; or
    (3) is incompatible with a clear mandate
    of public policy concerning the public
    health, safety or welfare or protection
    of the environment.
    [N.J.S.A. 34:19-3.]
    An “employee” is defined in a separate section.       An
    “employee” is “any individual who performs services for and
    under the control and direction of an employer for wages or
    other remuneration.”   N.J.S.A. 34:19-2(b).      There are no
    23
    exceptions to that generic definition contained in the Act.
    Moreover, our case law has taken an inclusive approach in
    determining who constitutes an employee for purposes of invoking
    the protection provided through this remedial legislation.    See
    D’Annunzio v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am., 
    192 N.J. 110
    , 126-27
    (2007) (extending CEPA protection, in furtherance of its
    remedial goals, to independent contractors through application
    of multi-factor test); see also Stomel v. City of Camden, 
    192 N.J. 137
    , 154-55 (2007) (applying D’Annunzio test in extending
    CEPA protection to legal professional serving as public
    defender); Feldman v. Hunterdon Radiological Assocs., 
    187 N.J. 228
    , 241 (2006) (urging courts to examine nature of plaintiff’s
    relationship with party against whom CEPA claims are advanced
    rather than relying on labels); cf. Lowe v. Zarghami, 
    158 N.J. 606
    , 617-18 (1999) (noting appropriateness of use of relative-
    nature-of-the-work test to broaden employee status when public
    policy underlying social legislation “dictate[s] a more liberal
    standard” (citations omitted)).
    To that statutory prescription of protected whistleblower
    activity for individuals who merit the designation of
    “employees” under CEPA, we add only the following general
    background law.
    Prior to the Appellate Division’s consideration of the
    instant matter, our Court had identified, and reduced to a
    24
    simple list, the necessary elements for a plaintiff to establish
    a prima facie claim under CEPA.    See Dzwonar, 
    supra,
     
    177 N.J. at 462
    .    Those four elements, which have not been altered to date,
    bear repeating.    To establish a prima facie CEPA action, a
    plaintiff must demonstrate that:
    (1)   he or she reasonably believed that his or
    her employer’s conduct was violating
    either a law, rule, or regulation
    promulgated pursuant to law, or a clear
    mandate of public policy;
    (2)   he or she performed a “whistle-blowing”
    activity described in N.J.S.A. 34:19-
    3(c);
    (3)   an adverse employment action was taken
    against him or her; and
    (4)   a causal connection exists between the
    whistle-blowing activity and the adverse
    employment action.
    [Ibid. (citations omitted); see also Winters
    v. N. Hudson Reg’l Fire & Rescue, 
    212 N.J. 67
    ,
    89 (2012) (quoting same).]
    Against that backdrop, we turn to consider whether the
    Appellate Division correctly determined that plaintiff’s ability
    to proceed with his CEPA claim was improperly cut short by the
    trial court’s grant of summary judgment to defendants and
    dismissal of the action.
    IV.
    A.
    1.
    25
    As the matter before us requires construction of a
    legislatively created cause of action, our job is to implement
    legislative intent.     N.J. Dep’t of Children & Families v. A.L.,
    
    213 N.J. 1
    , 20 (2013) (citing Allen v. V & A Bros., Inc., 
    208 N.J. 114
    , 127 (2011)).    In this instance, any fair analysis of
    CEPA’s scope must “begin . . . by looking at the statute’s plain
    language, which is generally the best indicator of the
    Legislature’s intent.”    Donelson, 
    supra,
     
    206 N.J. at
    256 (citing
    DiProspero v. Penn, 
    183 N.J. 477
    , 492 (2005)).
    Starting with that plain language, by its very terms, CEPA
    does not define employees protected by the Act as inclusive of
    only those with certain job functions.    An “employee” is “any
    individual who performs services for and under the control and
    direction of an employer for wages or other remuneration.”
    N.J.S.A. 34:19-2(b) (emphasis added).    As noted, our case law
    has extended the reach of that definition, not restricted it.
    See D’Annunzio, supra, 192 N.J. at 126-27.
    Certainly, no opinion from this Court has read into CEPA’s
    definition of an “employee” entitled to protection from
    retaliatory action under N.J.S.A. 34:19-2(b), any restriction to
    discrete classes of employees.    To do so would seemingly
    contravene two principles of statutory construction.    One is not
    to engraft language that the Legislature has not chosen to
    include in a statute.    See Murray v. Plainfield Rescue Squad,
    26
    
    210 N.J. 581
    , 596 (2012) (“We are charged with interpreting a
    statute; we have been given no commission to rewrite one.”).
    That principle has been invoked in the past when we have
    declined to add restrictive language to CEPA.    See Donelson,
    
    supra,
     
    206 N.J. at
    261 (citing Mazzacano v. Estate of Kinnerman,
    
    197 N.J. 307
    , 323 (2009)).   Another principle requires that, as
    remedial legislation, CEPA should be liberally construed.      See
    Dzwonar, 
    supra,
     
    177 N.J. at
    463 (citing Abbamont, 
    supra,
     
    138 N.J. at 431
    , for proposition that, as remedial legislation, CEPA
    should receive liberal construction to achieve “its important
    social goal[s]”); see generally D’Annunzio, supra, 192 N.J. at
    120 (citing cases in support of that longstanding guiding
    principle instructing interpretation of CEPA).
    There is simply no support in CEPA’s definition of
    “employee” to restrict the Act’s application and preclude its
    protection of watchdog employees.    Defendants concede that
    point, but nevertheless press their argument that plaintiff’s
    claim should be dismissed because he is not entitled to
    protection under N.J.S.A. 34:19-3, which defines protected
    activity under CEPA.   Their argument focuses on the Act’s
    description of protected activity in N.J.S.A. 34:19-3(c) -- the
    “objects to” clause.   Upon review, that argument is unpersuasive
    and the Appellate Division properly rejected it.
    27
    CEPA’s section that defines protected whistleblowing
    activity, N.J.S.A. 34:19-3, does not, on its face, expressly
    limit protection only to watchdog employees who object to
    conduct outside the scope of their job duties, as defendants
    argue.   Instead, N.J.S.A. 34:19-3 begins broadly:   “An employer
    shall not take any retaliatory action against an employee
    because the employee does any of the following . . . .”     It
    proceeds to set forth grounds for a CEPA claim in three
    circumstances.   They are when the employee:
    (1) “[d]iscloses, or threatens to disclose to a supervisor
    or to a public body an activity, policy or practice of the
    employer . . . ,” N.J.S.A. 34:19-3(a);
    (2) “[p]rovides information to, or testifies before, any
    public body conducting an investigation, hearing or inquiry into
    any violation of law, or a rule or regulation promulgated
    pursuant to law by the employer . . . ,” N.J.S.A. 34:19-3(b); or
    (3) “[o]bjects to, or refuses to participate in any
    activity, policy or practice . . . ,” N.J.S.A. 34:19-3(c).
    Defendants focus on subsection (c)’s use of the verbs of
    “object[]” or “refuse[] to participate” in an activity.
    According to defendants, those verbs are ambiguous and
    implicitly indicate, in this context, that an employee must act
    outside of his or her prescribed duties to engage in protected
    whistleblowing activity.   They reason that when an employee
    28
    expresses disagreement with an employer’s action or proposed
    action within the context of his or her normal job duties, the
    employee is acting on behalf and in service of the employer;
    therefore, according to defendants, such an employee is not
    “[o]bject[ing] to, or refus[ing] to participate in an[]
    activity, policy or practice” of the employer as N.J.S.A. 34:19-
    3(c) requires.   Defendants’ argument, in effect, would have this
    Court place an indirect limitation on the otherwise broad
    definition of an employee found in N.J.S.A. 34:19-2(b).     It
    certainly is not directly stated as a limitation in N.J.S.A.
    34:19-3(c).
    However, the plain meaning of the word “object” does not
    support defendant’s argument in favor of an implicit requirement
    that employees must be acting outside the scope of their job
    duties in order to engage in CEPA-protected conduct under
    N.J.S.A. 34:19-3(c).   See Donelson, 
    supra,
     
    206 N.J. at 256
    (explaining that Court “must ascribe to the words used in CEPA
    their ‘ordinary meaning and significance’”).   Webster’s II New
    Riverside University Dictionary defines “object” as:   (1) “To
    hold or present an opposing view”; and (2) “To feel adverse to
    or express disapproval of something.”   Webster’s II New
    Riverside University Dictionary 810 (1994).    That meaning is
    neither ambiguous, nor indicative of a requirement that
    employees go beyond or contradict their job duties in order to
    29
    “object[] to” an employer’s activity under subsection (c).     In
    construing this remedial legislation, we have repeatedly
    instructed courts to give it a liberal reading.   See D’Annunzio,
    supra, 192 N.J. at 120.   It would be wholly incongruent to
    strain the normal definition of “object” into some implicit
    requirement that limits a class of employee to whistleblower
    protection only for actions taken outside of normal job duties.
    Yet that is precisely what defendants seek through their
    argument.
    Although under subsection (c) the plaintiff must object or
    refuse to participate in an activity, whether the objection or
    refusal is part of his or her job responsibilities is not
    mentioned.   There is no language in subsection (c) that hints
    that an employee’s job duties affect whether he or she may bring
    a CEPA claim.   If anything, the corollary verbiage of “refuse[]
    to participate” in subsection (c) implies that CEPA-protected
    conduct can occur within the course of an employee’s normal job
    duties because it would be likely that the employee would be
    asked to participate in employer activity within the course of,
    or closely related to, his or her core job functions.    Moreover,
    the fact that subsection (c)(1) expressly provides protection
    when “a licensed or certified health care professional” objects
    to or refuses to participate in employer activity that
    “constitutes improper quality of patient care” provides further
    30
    indication that CEPA-protected conduct may occur in the course
    of one’s job duties:   it would undoubtedly arise most frequently
    within a core job function of a medical doctor to object to or
    refuse to participate in employer conduct that he or she
    reasonably believes “constitutes improper quality of patient
    care.”   N.J.S.A. 34:19-3(c)(1).
    Attention to the overall structure of N.J.S.A. 34:19-3
    further supports the conclusion that the “objects to” clause is
    not meant to exclude an employee’s normal job responsibilities.
    Neither subsection (a) nor subsection (b) state expressly, or
    suggest implicitly, that an employee must be acting outside of
    his or her usual duties to merit protection from retaliatory
    employer conduct.   Defendants’ argument about the “objects to”
    language ignores subsections (a) and (b), and focuses instead on
    the “object” verb used exclusively in subsection (c).   Read as a
    whole, it is inexplicable that the Legislature intended for
    subsection (c) to carry an implicit “job duties” exception that
    excludes watchdog employees, while the other subsections do not.
    See State v. Sutton, 
    132 N.J. 471
    , 479 (1993) (finding that
    court’s task is to harmonize individual sections and read
    statute in way that is most consistent with overall legislative
    intent).
    In sum, examination of the Act’s text, structure, and
    remedial nature provides compelling evidence against finding a
    31
    legislative intent to exclude watchdog employees from CEPA
    protection under N.J.S.A. 34:19-3(c).
    2.
    To the extent that defendants rely on Massarano, and the
    trial court found support in that decision for its grant of
    summary judgment in this matter, the argument is without solid
    foundation.   In Massarano, supra, the motion court had granted
    summary judgment to the defendants, finding that no law, rule,
    regulation, or clear mandate of public policy had been violated.
    
    400 N.J. Super. at 486-87
    .    The motion court in that matter
    further held that there was no whistleblowing activity,
    determining that the “plaintiff was merely doing her job as the
    security operations manager by reporting her findings and her
    opinion to [a supervisor].”    
    Id. at 491
    .   Although the Massarano
    Appellate Division decision contains language that suggests that
    a plaintiff who reports conduct as part of his or her job is not
    entitled to protection under CEPA, the panel’s analysis is
    premised on the conclusion that the defendants did not retaliate
    against the plaintiff for reporting the disposal of the
    documents.    
    Ibid.
       Defendants’ further argument that Massarano
    has been relied upon5 as support for recognition of a job-duties
    5 Defendants cite to unpublished decisions that ostensibly have
    relied on Massarano for such a position. Unpublished opinions
    have no precedential value and are not to be cited in argument
    32
    exception to CEPA’s broad protection to employees is similarly
    unavailing.   Any such reliance misperceives the case’s essential
    finding of no retaliation and results in an overextension of
    Massarano’s significance.   Moreover, we specifically disapprove
    of any such extrapolation from the Massarano judgment.
    Indeed, we note that decisions of this Court have indicated
    only a contrary approach to CEPA coverage for individuals in
    positions of responsibility for corporate compliance with law
    and public policy.
    In Mehlman v. Mobil Oil Corp., 
    153 N.J. 163
     (1998), our
    Court’s decision upheld a cause of action under CEPA for a New
    Jersey employee who alleged that his employer retaliated against
    him for objecting to a violation of a clear mandate of public
    policy that threatened to harm citizens of Japan.    
    Id.
     at 195-
    96.   The plaintiff, Dr. Myron Mehlman, was a toxicologist who
    was Mobil’s director of toxicology as well as manager of its
    Environmental Health and Science Laboratory.   
    Id. at 166, 168
    .
    Mehlman’s primary job responsibilities included “represent[ing]
    Mobil on toxicology matters, and provid[ing] toxicologic and
    regulatory advice for prudent business decisions.”   
    Id. at 168
    .
    (alterations in original) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    to the courts of this State pursuant to the Court Rules.    See R.
    1:36-3.
    33
    While representing Mobil at an international symposium in Japan,
    Mehlman learned that the benzene content of the gasoline at
    Mobil’s Japanese subsidiary was too high.   
    Id. at 169
    .      Mehlman
    so informed the Japanese managers and proceeded to insist that
    the levels were dangerous and had to be reduced.     
    Ibid.
        Upon
    returning from Japan, Mehlman was placed on indefinite special
    assignment and subsequently fired, allegedly because of a
    conflict of interest between his responsibilities to Mobil and
    his activities on behalf of his wife’s company.    
    Id. at 170-71
    .
    We had no hesitancy in recognizing that a cause of action
    existed under CEPA based on the fact that “the employee objected
    to a practice that he reasonably believed was incompatible with
    a clear mandate of public policy designed to protect the public
    health and safety of citizens of another country.”      
    Id. at 165
    .
    Our decision specifically noted that Mehlman’s responsibilities
    were “broad and of international scope,” and included “approval
    of protocols for and monitoring quality of toxicity testing” and
    “informing Mobil of pending developments in toxicology
    regulations that could affect Mobil’s worldwide business.”       
    Id. at 168
    .   None of those factors were ever regarded as
    disqualifying the plaintiff from advancing a CEPA claim.
    Similarly, in Estate of Roach, 
    supra,
     we addressed a
    scenario involving a plaintiff who was the manager of the
    defendant’s Business Ethics and Conduct Program and who was
    34
    substantially involved in implementing the company’s code of
    conduct, which required employees to report possible code-of-
    conduct violations.      164 N.J. at 602-03.     After attempting to
    report possible violations, the plaintiff was discharged from
    employment.   Id. at 604-06.    Our judgment upheld the jury’s CEPA
    verdict in favor of the plaintiff, and in our decision we
    pointed to “the numerous improprieties alleged” by the plaintiff
    against co-workers, the defendant company’s “sensitive position
    as a federal defense contractor,” and the existence of a code of
    conduct that required “strict compliance” for employees of the
    company.   Id. at 613.
    In conclusion, we find no support in CEPA’s language,
    construction, or application in this Court’s case law that
    supports that watchdog employees are stripped of whistleblower
    protection as a result of their position or because they are
    performing their regular job duties.         We therefore affirm the
    Appellate Division’s judgment in this matter that reversed the
    grant of summary judgment to defendants.
    B.
    Having agreed with the Appellate Division that watchdog
    employees are entitled to CEPA protection when performing their
    ordinary job duties, we turn to the panel’s reformulation of the
    elements for such a cause of action when brought by such
    employees.    The panel followed the Dzwonar paradigm for
    35
    establishing a CEPA cause of action, but added a caveat, as
    follows:
    [T]he employee must establish that he or she
    refused to participate or objected to this
    unlawful conduct, and advocated compliance
    with the relevant legal standards to the
    employer or to those designated by the
    employer with the authority and responsibility
    to comply. To be clear, this second element
    requires a plaintiff to show he or she either
    (a) pursued and exhausted all internal means
    of securing compliance; or (b) refused to
    participate in the objectionable conduct.
    [Lippman, supra, 432 N.J. Super. at 410.]
    Although we do not doubt its intent to be helpful by adding
    clarity to the proofs required for a watchdog employee’s CEPA
    cause of action under N.J.S.A. 34:19-3(c), whose verbiage the
    panel tracked, we are compelled to disapprove of the panel’s
    formulation.   Simply put, the panel has added to the burden
    required for watchdog employees to secure CEPA protection under
    subsection (c) by including an obligation nowhere found in the
    statutory language.
    For the same reasons cited earlier, courts should not
    rewrite plainly worded statutes.     It is not our job to engraft
    requirements to a CEPA cause of action under subsection (c) that
    the Legislature did not include.     It is our role to enforce the
    legislative intent as expressed through the words used by the
    Legislature.   In subsection (c), there is no exhaustion
    requirement.
    36
    By way of contrast, where the Legislature intended to
    impose an exhaustion requirement, it has said so clearly.
    Through N.J.S.A. 34:19-4, the Legislature has required prior
    notice to the employer and opportunity to correct the activity,
    policy, or practice, in order for a putative whistleblower
    plaintiff to obtain protection against retaliatory action for
    disclosure made to a public body.     Thus, a whistleblower
    plaintiff pursuing a cause of action based on disclosure to a
    public body under subsection (a) or (b) must demonstrate
    compliance with N.J.S.A. 34:19-4’s particular exhaustion
    requirement.   The legislative silence on any such requirement
    applicable to actions brought under subsection (c) is deafening.
    Besides lacking support from CEPA’s text, the requirement
    imposed by the panel is incompatible with Fleming, supra.     164
    N.J. at 97 (rejecting argument that employer may insist on
    exhaustion of internal complaint procedures for employee to be
    eligible for CEPA protection).   And, as one amicus rightfully
    pointed out, the exhaustion requirement imposed by the Appellate
    Division exceeds the obligation expressly imposed by the
    Legislature under N.J.S.A. 34:19-4, which requires only notice
    and opportunity to correct.
    For all the above reasons, we modify the Appellate Division
    judgment to the extent that it imposed an exhaustion requirement
    not supported by the statute’s terms.     We hold that CEPA imposes
    37
    no additional requirements on watchdog employees bringing a CEPA
    claim unless and until the Legislature expresses its intent that
    such employees meet a special or heightened burden.
    V.
    The judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed, as
    modified.   The matter is remanded for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES ALBIN, FERNANDEZ-VINA and
    SOLOMON join in JUSTICE LaVECCHIA’s opinion. JUSTICE PATTERSON
    and JUDGE CUFF (temporarily assigned) did not participate.
    38
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    NO.    A-65/66                                 SEPTEMBER TERM 2013
    ON CERTIFICATION TO            Appellate Division, Superior Court
    JOEL S. LIPPMAN, M.D.,
    Plaintiff-Respondent
    and Cross-Appellant,
    v.
    ETHICON, INC. and JOHNSON &
    JOHNSON, INC.,
    Defendants-Appellants
    and Cross-Respondents.
    DECIDED               July 15, 2015
    Chief Justice Rabner                          PRESIDING
    OPINION BY                 Justice LaVecchia
    CONCURRING/DISSENTING OPINIONS BY
    DISSENTING OPINION BY
    AFFIRMED AS
    CHECKLIST                         MODIFIED/
    REMANDED
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER                     X
    JUSTICE LaVECCHIA                        X
    JUSTICE ALBIN                            X
    JUSTICE PATTERSON               --------------------   --------------------
    JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA                   X
    JUSTICE SOLOMON                          X
    JUDGE CUFF (t/a)                --------------------   --------------------
    TOTALS                                   5