DAVID F. CALABOTTA VS. PHIBRO ANIMAL HEALTH CORPORATION (L-1979-17, BERGEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) , 460 N.J. Super. 38 ( 2019 )


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  •                NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-1576-17T3
    DAVID F. CALABOTTA,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,             APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    June 27, 2019
    v.
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    PHIBRO ANIMAL HEALTH
    CORPORATION, DEAN J.
    WARRAS, and DANIEL A.
    WELCH,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    _____________________________
    Argued May 13, 2019 – Decided June 27, 2019
    Before Judges Sabatino, Sumners and Mitterhoff.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Bergen County, Docket No. L-1979-17.
    Kathryn Kristine Mc Clure and Mary Anne Sedey
    (Sedey Harper Westhoff, PC) of the State of Missouri
    bar, admitted pro hac vice, argued the cause for
    appellant (Smith Eibeler, LLC, and Mary Anne Sedey,
    attorneys; Kathryn K. Mc Clure and Mary Anne
    Sedey, of counsel and on the briefs; John D. Lynn
    (Sedey Harper Westhoff, PC) of the State of Missouri
    bar, admitted pro hac vice, of counsel and on the
    briefs).
    Martin Warren Aron argued the cause for respondents
    (Jackson Lewis PC, attorneys; Martin Warren Aron, of
    counsel and on the briefs; Mary L. Moore and
    Katerina Rose Mantell, on the briefs).
    James Edward Burden argued the cause for amicus
    curiae NELA-NJ (Smith Mullin, PC, attorneys; James
    Edward Burden, on the brief).
    James Patrick Flynn argued the cause for amicus
    curiae ANJMA (Epstein Becker & Green PC,
    attorneys; James Patrick Flynn, of counsel and on the
    brief; David Wayne Garland, on the brief).
    James R. Michael, Deputy Attorney General, argued
    the cause for amicus curiae the Attorney General of
    New Jersey (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General,
    attorney; Jason Wade Rockwell, Assistant Attorney
    General, of counsel; James R. Michael, on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    SABATINO, P.J.A.D.
    This lawsuit is brought by an Illinois resident against his New Jersey-
    based former employer. Plaintiff alleges the company wrongfully denied him
    a promotion to a position in New Jersey and thereafter wrongfully terminated
    him from his job with its subsidiary in Illinois.
    Plaintiff claims the company engaged in "associational" discrimination
    against him, in violation of the New Jersey Law Against Discrimination
    ("NJLAD"), based on the fact that his wife was then terminally ill with cancer.
    The company maintains it treated plaintiff fairly, that he never applied for the
    A-1576-17T3
    2
    promotion, and that it justifiably discharged him for engaging in inappropriate
    conduct at a trade show.
    The appeal raises two important and novel questions of law.
    First, under principles of statutory construction, can the NJLAD protect
    nonresident workers and job applicants, despite the fact that the statute's
    preamble refers to "inhabitants" of this state?
    Second, even if the NJLAD can extend to certain out-of-state plaintiffs,
    do choice-of-law principles weigh in favor of applying the law of Illinois
    instead to plaintiff's respective failure-to-promote and wrongful discharge
    claims?
    The trial court concluded that Illinois law, rather than the NJLAD, must
    apply to plaintiff's claims of discrimination because he lived in Illinois and
    worked for defendants' subsidiary in Illinois. Given that Illinois law has yet to
    recognize a cause of action for associational discrimination, the court granted
    defendants' motion to dismiss plaintiff's claims with prejudice.
    For   the   reasons   that   follow,   we   conclude   that   the   NJLAD,
    notwithstanding the solitary reference to "inhabitants" in its preamble, can
    extend in appropriate circumstances to plaintiffs who reside or work outside of
    this state. However, whether the NJLAD applies to a particular nonresident's
    claims turns upon a weighing of the multiple choice-of-law factors set forth in
    A-1576-17T3
    3
    the Restatement (Second) of Conflicts of Laws (Am. Law Inst. 1971) (the
    "Second Restatement"), as adopted and construed by the New Jersey Supreme
    Court.
    We hold that New Jersey law, and specifically the NJLAD's ban against
    associational discrimination, applies to defendants' alleged failure to give
    plaintiff fair consideration for a promotion to a position in New Jersey. The
    Second Restatement factors strongly weigh in favor of applying New Jersey
    law, not Illinois law, to this failure-to-promote claim. We therefore reverse
    the trial court's dismissal of that discrete claim.
    As to plaintiff's wrongful discharge claim, we vacate its dismissal and
    remand the choice-of-law issue pertaining to that claim to the trial court for
    further analysis. We do so to enable the further development of critical facts
    bearing on the Second Restatement factors. Among other things, the record
    needs to be developed more fully and definitively concerning such things as:
    the location(s) of the person(s) within the company who took part in the
    decision to terminate plaintiff; the sole or dominant place, if any, that the
    decision was made; and the location(s) of plaintiff's conduct that precipitated
    his discharge.    After those and other facts pertinent to the choice-of-law
    analysis are more fully developed, the trial court shall reassess which state has
    A-1576-17T3
    4
    the "most significant relationship" overall to plaintiff's wrongful discharge
    claim.
    I.
    We glean the following facts and allegations from plaintiff's complaint
    and related pleadings, mindful that discovery has not yet been conducted and
    credibility determinations have not been made.
    A.
    Plaintiff's Work in Illinois for Phibro's Subsidiary
    Defendant Phibro Animal Health Corporation ("Phibro"), a company
    headquartered in Teaneck, New Jersey, develops and sells animal food
    additives. Prince Agri Products Incorporated ("Prince Agri"), a subsidiary of
    Phibro, handles marketing, product management, research, development, and
    technical support. Prince Agri's office is located in Quincy, Illinois, where
    plaintiff resided at all times relevant to this case.
    In 2008, Phibro hired plaintiff to serve as a Vice President of Marketing
    and Technology Deployment at Prince Agri's office.             He worked in that
    position at Prince Agri in Illinois until his termination in 2016.
    When plaintiff was hired, he signed three employment-related form
    agreements: a Noncompetition and Nonsolicitation Agreement, an Employee
    Invention Agreement, and a Confidentiality and Nondisclosure Agreement.
    A-1576-17T3
    5
    All three agreements contained the following provision:
    THIS AGREEMENT WILL BE GOVERNED BY
    THE LAWS OF THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY
    WITHOUT REGARD FOR CONFLICTS OF LAW
    PRINCIPLES.   I EXPRESSLY CONSENT TO
    VENUE IN, AND THE PERSONAL JURISDICTION
    OF, THE STATE AND FEDERAL COURTS
    LOCATED IN NEW JERSEY FOR ANY LAWSUIT
    ARISING FROM OR RELATING TO THIS
    AGREEMENT.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    Each agreement further stated: "This Agreement does not alter the status of
    my employment as an at-will employee of [Phibro]."
    Defendant Dean J. Warras, the President of Prince Agri, was plaintiff's
    direct supervisor. Defendant Daniel A. Welch worked as Phibro's Senior Vice
    President of Human Resources.
    Plaintiff maintains that Warras's and Welch's offices were located at
    Phibro's headquarters in Teaneck. However, in connection with defendants'
    motion to dismiss the complaint, Warras certified that his own employment
    was based out of Prince Agri's office in Illinois, the state where Warras
    maintained a primary residence until approximately August 2016.
    While at Prince Agri, plaintiff supervised a team of approximately forty
    employees who managed existing product portfolios, identified new products,
    conducted research on product use and development, and provided customer
    A-1576-17T3
    6
    and technical support.     According to plaintiff, he consistently received
    excellent annual performance reviews. Among other accolades, the reviews
    reportedly stated that plaintiff worked "extremely hard," did an "excellent job,"
    "significantly strengthened" his team over the years, and generated "new
    credibility and cache in the industry and academic community" for Phibro's
    products.   According to plaintiff, Phibro never placed him on any type of
    "Performance    Management      Plan"    or   "formally   counseled   [him]    for
    performance or conduct issues."
    B.
    Disabling Health Issues of Plaintiff's Wife
    Plaintiff's wife, Beth Calabotta, was diagnosed with breast cancer in
    2008. Following a period of remission, Beth's breast cancer recurred in 2014
    and spread to other parts of her body.
    Plaintiff contends he openly discussed Beth's health issues and prognosis
    with his co-workers and supervisors. According to plaintiff, between 2014 and
    2016 Warras periodically asked him questions about Beth's medical condition.
    Plaintiff believed that Warras shared the information about his wife's condition
    with Welch. Additionally, in May and June 2016, the Quincy Herald-Whig
    and the Wall Street Journal featured Beth in prominent news stories that
    A-1576-17T3
    7
    discussed her terminal illness. 1
    C.
    Company Reorganization and the New Jersey Position
    In June 2016, Warras informed plaintiff that Phibro was reorganizing its
    operations and his responsibilities would be reduced significantly. Under the
    reorganization, plaintiff would no longer be responsible for marketing and
    project management, and ten to fifteen people would be cut from his sta ff.
    Moreover, plaintiff's title would change to Vice President, Research and
    Technical Support.
    Warras told plaintiff that Phibro had created a new position based at
    Phibro's headquarters in New Jersey for a Senior Vice President of Marketing
    and Product Management.         According to plaintiff, he inquired about who
    would be considered for the new position, and Warras responded that an
    independent recruiting firm would begin interviewing candidates "in the very
    near future." When plaintiff asked whether he would be considered for the
    new position, Warras allegedly replied, "I did not think that you would be
    interested. The job is in New Jersey and with Beth's situation and all . . . ."
    Plaintiff claims he informed Warras and Welch on multiple occasions
    1
    Beth died in March 2017, about eight months after plaintiff was terminated.
    A-1576-17T3
    8
    between June and July 2016 that he "should get serious consideration" for the
    new Senior Vice President position, given his marketing and product
    management experience at Prince Agri.           At one point, Welch allegedly
    responded, "I don't know if that is going to happen." Plaintiff requested from
    Warras the job description for the new position. According to plaintiff, Warras
    assured him that he would get a copy of it. Warras also allegedly promised to
    talk to Phibro's senior managers about plaintiff's interest in the post.
    Despite these alleged assurances, plaintiff was not interviewed for the
    new position and was not provided with the job description. In early July
    2016, plaintiff learned that the recruiting firm had interviewed other candidates
    for the position. Plaintiff did not receive the promotion.
    D.
    The July 2016 National Meeting and Plaintiff's Subsequent Discharge
    Between July 19 and July 23, 2016, plaintiff and several members of his
    team attended a national meeting of the American Dairy Science Association
    ("ADSA").2
    On July 22, 2016, Welch called plaintiff to discuss a "serious problem"
    that had arisen at the ADSA meeting during a presentation made by a member
    2
    The present record does not reveal in which state the ADSA meeting was
    held.
    A-1576-17T3
    9
    of plaintiff's staff and how plaintiff had handled the situation. The detail s of
    this incident are not fully explained in the complaint. At the end of their
    phone conversation, Welch suspended plaintiff with pay, "pending further
    investigation."   Plaintiff claims that, despite his request for details, Welch
    never told him what accusations were being investigated.
    On or about August 19, 2016, plaintiff met with Warras and Welch.
    They told him that they had "corroborated the allegations" against him. The
    complaint does not state where this meeting took place. Plaintiff again a sked
    what the allegations were, but he claims he was not given an answer. He
    asserts he told Warras and Welch that, "he still believed he handled the
    situation [at the ADSA meeting] appropriately." They disagreed. Ultimately,
    Welch handed plaintiff a draft Separation Agreement and terminated his
    employment.
    Plaintiff did not sign the Separation Agreement, which proposed that he
    give up his right to sue for claims "arising from or in any way connected with"
    his employment and termination, in exchange for $117,000 in severance pay.
    Paragraph 10 of the unsigned Separation Agreement stated that it "shall be
    interpreted for all purposes consistent with the laws of the State of New
    Jersey."
    A-1576-17T3
    10
    Plaintiff maintains that the deliberations among Warras, Welch, and
    other senior executives culminating in their decision not to consider him for
    the promotional position, and their subsequent decision to terminate him, all
    occurred at Phibro's headquarters in New Jersey. Defendants, however, have
    not acknowledged that these decisions and communications were made in or
    confined to New Jersey.
    According to the representations of counsel at the appellate oral
    argument, plaintiff applied for and obtained unemployment compensation from
    Illinois state authorities following his discharge. The present record does not
    reveal whether plaintiff's unemployment benefits application mentioned his
    contention that he was fired for discriminatory reasons.
    II.
    A.
    Plaintiff's Complaint
    In March 2017, plaintiff filed a complaint in the Law Division against
    Phibro, Warras, and Welch. Count one alleges that defendants discriminated
    against him in violation of the NJLAD "on account of his association with a
    person with a disability" on two separate occasions: (1) when they refused to
    consider him for a promotion in New Jersey, and (2) when they subsequently
    terminated his employment.      Counts two and three allege that defendants
    A-1576-17T3
    11
    Warras and Welch aided and abetted Phibro in violating the NJLAD. Plaintiff
    seeks compensatory damages, punitive damages, and statutory attorney fees. 3
    B.
    The Dismissal of the Complaint and Denial of Reconsideration
    Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint under Rule 4:6-2(e). They
    argued that, even accepting plaintiff's factual allegations as true, plaintiff has
    no viable cause of action under the NJLAD as an Illinois resident who worked
    for the company's subsidiary in Illinois.
    On September 1, 2017, the trial court dismissed the complaint with
    prejudice, holding that "[t]he NJLAD does not apply to employees whose
    employment is based outside of New Jersey." The motion judge relied largely
    on this court's opinion in Buccilli v. Timby, Brown & Timby, 
    283 N.J. Super. 6
     (App. Div. 1995), in which we found that Pennsylvania law, rather than the
    NJLAD, governed a New Jersey resident's claims of discrimination by her
    Pennsylvania employer for whom she had worked in Pennsylvania.
    3
    There is a related federal lawsuit pending. In June 2017, plaintiff filed a
    Notice of Charge of Discrimination with the United States Equal Employment
    Opportunity Commission ("EEOC"), a claim which factually mirrored his
    NJLAD complaint. In July 2017, the EEOC granted him the right to sue under
    federal law. Plaintiff thereafter sued defendants in the United States District
    Court for the Central District of Illinois, asserting claims against them
    exclusively under federal law. That federal lawsuit is stayed, pending the
    resolution of this appeal.
    A-1576-17T3
    12
    Plaintiff moved for reconsideration. He presented to the court, for the
    first time, the three employment agreements he signed in 2008 and the
    unsigned Separation Agreement, all of which stated that any lawsuits arising
    out of those documents would be governed by New Jersey law. Defendants
    argued these employment agreements pertained only to discrete subjects and
    were not applicable to plaintiff's present discrimination claims.
    On October 27, 2017, the trial court denied plaintiff's motion for
    reconsideration, concluding that the proffered agreements did not require the
    application of New Jersey law to his claims in this case.
    Plaintiff's present appeal ensued.
    C.
    The Amici on Appeal
    After the appeal was filed, the National Employment Lawyers
    Association of New Jersey ("NELA-NJ"), a statewide organization of attorneys
    who solely or primarily represent persons in employment-related matters,
    sought and was granted leave to appear in this appeal as amicus curiae. We
    thereafter invited the Attorney General to appear as amicus curiae to address
    the novel legal issues of statutory construction and choice-of-law presented.
    The Attorney General accepted the invitation and filed an amicus brief. In
    addition, we likewise granted the Academy of New Jersey Management
    A-1576-17T3
    13
    Attorneys, Inc. ("ANJMA"), an organization of New Jersey lawyers who have
    long represented employers in labor and employment matters, leave to appear
    as amicus curiae.4
    Plaintiff and amicus NELA-NJ argue the trial court should have applied
    the NJLAD to both his failure-to-promote and wrongful termination claims.
    Defendants and amicus ANJMA counter that the court correctly applied
    Illinois law to both claims.
    The Attorney General presents a more nuanced position. The Attorney
    General asserts that the NJLAD clearly should apply to plaintiff's failure-to-
    promote claim, but that the present record is inadequate to resolve whether the
    Second Restatement factors call for New Jersey or Illinois law to apply to his
    separate wrongful termination claim.
    III.
    The pivotal question posed in this appeal is whether New Jersey law
    (including specifically the NJLAD) or Illinois law applies to each of this
    Illinois resident's claims against a New Jersey-based parent company and its
    officials. To answer this question, we must consider both the intended scope
    4
    We express our appreciation for the helpful participation of all three amici in
    this case of first impression.
    A-1576-17T3
    14
    of the NJLAD as well as choice-of-law principles adopted by the New Jersey
    Supreme Court, including relevant portions of the Second Restatement.
    A.
    De Novo Review
    In evaluating the trial court's decision declining to apply New Jersey law
    to either of plaintiff's claims, we apply a de novo scope of review. "Choice -of-
    law determinations present legal questions, which are subjected to de novo
    review." Fairfax Fin. Holdings Ltd. v. S.A.C. Capital Mgmt., LLC, 
    450 N.J. Super. 1
    , 33 (App. Div. 2017).
    In addition, appellate review of an order dismissing a complaint for
    failure to state a claim under Rule 4:6-2(e) is conducted pursuant to a plenary
    scope of review, with no deference owed to the trial court's legal conclusions.
    Rezem Family Assocs., LP v. Borough of Millstone, 
    423 N.J. Super. 103
    , 114
    (App. Div. 2011). We proceed with our analysis guided by these appellate
    review standards.
    B.
    General Choice-of-Law Principles
    Several well-established principles of choice of law frame our
    discussion.
    A-1576-17T3
    15
    To begin with, "When New Jersey is the forum state, its choice-of-law
    rules control."     Fairfax, 450 N.J. Super. at 34.       "[O]ur choice-of-law
    jurisprudence has striven to structure rules that will lead to predictable and
    uniform results that are fair and just and that will meet the reasonable
    expectations of the parties." McCarrell v. Hoffmann-La Roche, Inc., 
    227 N.J. 569
    , 573 (2017). We may decide choice-of-law questions on an "issue-by-
    issue" basis.     Fairfax, 450 N.J. Super. at 34.    See also Ginsberg ex rel.
    Ginsberg v. Quest Diagnostics, Inc., 
    441 N.J. Super. 198
    , 230 (App. Div.
    2015) (recognizing this principle and also holding that choice-of-law issues at
    times may be decided on a defendant-by-defendant basis).
    "Procedurally, the first step is to determine whether an actual conflict
    exists" through an examination of "the substance of the potentially applicable
    laws to determine whether 'there is a distinction' between them." P.V. ex rel.
    T.V. v. Camp Jaycee, 
    197 N.J. 132
    , 143 (2008) (quoting Lebegern v. Forman,
    
    471 F.3d 424
    , 430 (3d Cir. 2006)).          "A conflict of law arises when the
    application of one or another state's law may alter the outcome of the case . . .
    or when the law of one interested state is 'offensive or repugnant' to the public
    policy of the other." In re Accutane Litig., 
    235 N.J. 229
    , 254 (2018) (quoting
    Cont'l Ins. Co. v. Honeywell Int'l, Inc., 
    234 N.J. 23
    , 46 (2018)). See also
    Fairfax, 450 N.J. Super. at 42-43 ("A conflict arises . . . when one state
    A-1576-17T3
    16
    provides a cause of action but the other does not . . . ."). If no such conflict
    exists, "then 'there is no choice-of-law issue to be resolved,' Camp Jaycee, 
    197 N.J. at 143
    , and the forum state applies its own law, McCarrell, 227 N.J. at
    584." In re Accutane, 235 N.J. at 254.
    If an actual conflict exists, then New Jersey courts in cases involving
    claims of tortious conduct 5 apply the choice-of-law principles described in the
    Second Restatement, particularly sections 6, 145, and 146.           See In re
    Accutane, 235 N.J. at 257-63; Camp Jaycee, 
    197 N.J. at 135-36
    .
    Section 6(1) of the Second Restatement begins with the threshold
    principle that "[a] court, subject to constitutional restrictions, will follow a
    statutory directive of its own state on choice of law." Restatement (Second) §
    6(1).    A choice-of-law analysis "is preempted when our Legislature has
    determined that New Jersey public policy requires the application of our
    substantive law whenever our courts have jurisdiction over the kind of claim at
    issue, regardless of the interest of another state." Fairfax, 450 N.J. Super. at
    5
    The parties and the amici have fashioned their arguments on a premise that
    plaintiff's claims of discrimination in this case are most akin to claims of
    tortious conduct rather than claims of breach of contract. See Montells v.
    Haynes, 
    133 N.J. 282
    , 291 (1993) (treating claims of discrimination under the
    NJLAD as most akin to torts and thus subject to New Jersey's two-year statute
    of limitations). Cf. Second Restatement § 186 (expressing the applicable
    choice-of-law principles for breach of contract claims). We accept that
    premise for purposes of our analysis.
    A-1576-17T3
    17
    43.
    Where the legislative intent cannot be ascertained, either through "an
    explicit statutory directive" or "by a process of interpretation and
    construction," id. at 47, our courts apply the most-significant-relationship test
    in tort matters to resolve choice-of-law questions. See In re Accutane, 235
    N.J. at 257-63; Camp Jaycee, 
    197 N.J. at 135-36
    . "The [Second] Restatement's
    most-significant-relationship test embodies all the elements of [the New Jersey
    Supreme] Court's former governmental-interest test and adds 'a series of other
    factors deemed worthy of consideration.'" In re Accutane, 235 N.J. at 257
    (quoting Camp Jaycee, 
    197 N.J. at
    142 n.4).
    To determine whether New Jersey has the most significant relationship,
    we consider sections 145 and 146, which provide the general principles for tort
    actions, as well as section 6, which outlines universal principles for choice-of-
    law issues. In re Accutane, 235 N.J. at 260.
    Choice-of-law "analysis begins with section 146 and the presumption [in
    tort-based cases] that the law of the state where the injury occurs applies." Id.
    at 259. However, that "presumption may be overcome if 'some other state has
    a more significant relationship with the parties . . . based on an assessment of
    each state's contacts' viewed through the prism of section 145 . . . and section
    6." Ibid. (quoting McCarrell, 227 N.J. at 590).
    A-1576-17T3
    18
    Specifically, section 146 provides:
    In an action for a personal injury, [6] the local law of
    the state where the injury occurred determines the
    rights and liabilities of the parties, unless, with respect
    to the particular issue, some other state has a more
    significant relationship under the principles stated in §
    6 to the occurrence and the parties, in which event the
    local law of the other state will be applied.
    [Second Restatement § 146 (emphasis added).]
    Section 6 provides a list of seven, non-exclusive general factors to be
    considered when deciding which state's law applies:
    (a) the needs of the interstate and international
    systems,
    (b) the relevant policies of the forum,
    (c) the relevant policies of other interested states and
    the relative interests of those states in the
    determination of the particular issue,
    (d) the protection of justified expectations,
    (e) the basic policies underlying the particular field of
    law,
    (f) certainty, predictability and uniformity of result,
    and
    6
    We consider plaintiff's claims to encompass allegations of "personal injury,"
    since his complaint seeks damages for, among other things, pain and suffering
    and emotional distress. None of the counsel before us have argued to the
    contrary.
    A-1576-17T3
    19
    (g) ease in the determination and application of the
    law to be applied.
    [Second Restatement § 6(2).]
    "The factor that deserves the greatest emphasis in a particular case is
    that which furthers the most relevant policy interest . . . ." Fairfax, 450 N.J.
    Super. at 48. Notably, "[w]hen 'the purposes sought to be achieved by a local
    statute . . . would be furthered by its application to out-of-state facts, . . . this is
    a weighty reason why such application should be made.'"                 Ibid. (quoting
    Second Restatement § 6(2) cmt. e). "In general, it is fitting that the state
    whose interests are most deeply affected should have its local law applied."
    Second Restatement § 6(2) cmt. f.
    Section 145, meanwhile, requires consideration of "certain contacts" to
    determine which state "has the most significant relationship to the occurrence
    and the parties under the principles stated in § 6."          Second Restatement §
    145(1), (2). Those contacts include:
    (a) the place where the injury occurred,
    (b) the place where the conduct causing the injury
    occurred,
    (c) the domicil[e], residence, nationality, place of
    incorporation and place of business of the parties, and
    (d) the place where the relationship, if any, between
    the parties is centered.
    A-1576-17T3
    20
    [Second Restatement § 145(2).]
    "The contacts analysis is 'not merely quantitative,'" as "[i]ts purpose is to
    assess the contacts in terms of the guiding touchstones of the Second
    Restatement's section 6."        Fairfax, 450 N.J. Super. at 51 (quoting Camp
    Jaycee, 
    197 N.J. at 147
    ).         Moreover, "the contacts 'are to be evaluated
    according to their relative importance with respect to the particular issue.'"
    Fairfax, 450 N.J. Super. at 51 (quoting Second Restatement § 145).7
    This legal framework first requires us to consider whether an actual
    conflict exists between the potentially applicable New Jersey and Illinois laws.
    If such a conflict exists, then section 6 logically entails a two-step assessment.
    First, we must consider whether the Legislature intended for the NJLAD to
    encompass plaintiff's claims as alleged in the complaint. If so, then, we must
    consider whether the Legislature also intended the terms of the NJLAD to
    override conflicting Illinois law as to those claims. If the legislative intent is
    unclear, then further analysis is warranted to resolve the choice-of-law
    question, using the factors in section 6(2) and the most-significant-relationship
    test expressed in section 145.
    7
    The recently adopted Restatement of the Law, Employment Law (Am. Law
    Inst. 2015), does not provide any guidance on choice-of-law issues arising in
    the employment context.
    A-1576-17T3
    21
    IV.
    A.
    Apparent Conflict Between the States' Laws
    As a starting point, we proceed with a premise that there is an actual
    conflict between New Jersey law and Illinois law germane to plaintiff's claims
    of "associational" discriminatory treatment by his employer.
    The NJLAD prohibits "any unlawful discrimination against any person
    because such person is or has been at any time disabled . . . unless the nature
    and extent of the disability reasonably precludes the performance of the
    particular employment." N.J.S.A. 10:5-4.1. Although the NJLAD does not
    expressly set forth a cause of action for discrimination based upon a plaintiff's
    association with a member of a protected class, case law has recognized the
    viability of such an associational claim under the statute.
    This court has held "where the plaintiff is wrongfully discharged for
    associating with a member of a protected group [under the NJLAD], that is the
    functional equivalent of being a member of the protected group." O'Lone v.
    N.J. Dep't of Corr., 
    313 N.J. Super. 249
    , 255 (App. Div. 1998). Accordingly, a
    plaintiff closely associated with such a disabled person or other member of a
    protected class can serve as the "functional equivalent" of an "aggrieved
    person" under section 5-13 of the NJLAD. See Downs v. U.S. Pipe & Foundry
    A-1576-17T3
    22
    Co., 
    441 F. Supp. 2d 661
    , 662-65 (D.N.J. 2006) (similarly recognizing an
    employee's protection under the NJLAD from being discriminated against
    because of his spouse's disabling mental health disorders that caused him to
    miss time from work on short notice). 8
    In comparison, Illinois law has yet to recognize a cause of action for
    associational discrimination. Nothing in that state's general antidiscrimination
    provision, the Illinois Human Rights Act, 775 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/2-101 to -107
    (2019), expresses such associational protection, although plaintiff reserves the
    right to argue such protection is implied.
    Hence, we shall conduct our choice-of-law analysis with an assumption
    – which the trial court shared – that there is an actual conflict between New
    Jersey law and Illinois law as to the viability of plaintiff's associational
    discrimination claims. 9
    8
    The New Jersey Supreme Court has not repudiated this theory of
    associational discrimination.     Given the Court's historically broad
    interpretation of the NJLAD, we have no reason to think the Court disapproves
    of such a cause of action.
    9
    Although they did not brief it, at oral argument on appeal, counsel also
    pointed out that New Jersey law differs from Illinois law with respect to the
    need to exhaust administrative remedies and the availability of punitive
    damages. See 775 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/8–111(D); 775 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/8B-104.
    But see 775 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/10-102(C). We need not resolve here those
    choice-of-law issues, which were not addressed by the trial court.
    A-1576-17T3
    23
    B.
    Section 6 of the Second Restatement
    We next must consider, under section 6(1) of the Second Restatement,
    whether our State Legislature has issued "a statutory directive" that calls for
    the application of the NJLAD to the facts of this case involving a nonresident
    plaintiff who worked for a New Jersey parent company outside of New Jersey.
    This question essentially involves two components.          First, did our
    Legislature intend the NJLAD to be broad enough to extend to certain
    nonresidents such as plaintiff who seek employment in New Jersey? Second,
    if so, has the Legislature issued through the NJLAD a choice-of-law
    "directive" that compels our courts to apply New Jersey law to such plaintiffs
    and their employers, rather than conflicting out-of-state laws?
    1.
    Legislative Intent as to the NJLAD's Breadth
    As to the first query, we are persuaded that our Legislature has
    expressed an intention to allow certain nonresident plaintiffs to receive the
    benefits and protections of the NJLAD. Such an intention about the NJLAD's
    breadth may be gleaned from both the words of the statute and the expansive
    policies that underpin it.
    A-1576-17T3
    24
    "Any fair analysis" of the scope of a statute "begin[s] . . . by looking at
    the statute's plain language, which is generally the best indicator of the
    Legislature's intent." Lippman v. Ethicon, Inc., 
    222 N.J. 362
    , 380-81 (2015)
    (quoting Donelson v. DuPont Chambers Works, 
    206 N.J. 243
    , 256 (2011)). "If
    the plain language leads to a clear and unambiguous result, then [the]
    interpretive process is over." Richardson v. Bd. of Trs. Police & Firemen's
    Ret. Sys., 
    192 N.J. 189
    , 195 (2007). See also State v. Harper, 
    229 N.J. 228
    ,
    237 (2017). "However, if a statute's plain language is ambiguous or subject to
    multiple interpretations," then courts look to extrinsic evidence to inform their
    analysis, "including legislative history."   Parsons v. Mullica Twp. Bd. of
    Educ., 
    226 N.J. 297
    , 308 (2016).
    Because this case concerns claims under the NJLAD, "special rules of
    interpretation also apply." Nini v. Mercer Cty. Cmty. Coll., 
    202 N.J. 98
    , 108
    (2010). "When confronted with any interpretive question" pertaining to the
    NJLAD, our courts "must recognize" the NJLAD's pronouncement of its broad
    public policy goals.   Smith v. Millville Rescue Squad, 
    225 N.J. 373
    , 390
    (2016).
    The NJLAD is "remedial legislation, intended 'to eradicate the cancer of
    discrimination[,]' protect employees, and deter employers from engaging in
    discriminatory practices." Acevedo v. Flightsafety Int'l, Inc., 449 N.J. Super.
    A-1576-17T3
    25
    185, 190 (App. Div. 2017) (quoting Jackson v. Concord Co., 
    54 N.J. 113
    , 124
    (1969)). It is well established that the NJLAD should be "liberally construed
    'in order to advance its beneficial purposes.'" Smith, 225 N.J. at 390 (quoting
    Nini, 
    202 N.J. at 115
    ). "[T]he more broadly [the NJLAD] is applied, the
    greater its antidiscriminatory impact."     Nini, 
    202 N.J. at 115
    .      Because
    workplace discrimination is "still a pervasive problem in the modern
    workplace, even 'novel arguments' advanced by victims . . . 'require our utmost
    care and attention.'"   Smith, 225 N.J. at 390 (quoting Quinlan v. Curtiss-
    Wright Corp., 
    204 N.J. 239
    , 260 (2010)).
    The NJLAD's broad and strong language provides ample support for
    plaintiff's position that, subject to other choice-of-law factors, he may bring
    claims under the statute, despite the fact that he lived and worked for
    defendants out-of-state. N.J.S.A. 10:5-4 states that, "[a]ll persons shall have
    the opportunity to obtain employment . . . without discrimination . . . . This
    opportunity is recognized and declared to be a civil right." (Emphasis added).
    Moreover, N.J.S.A. 10:5-5(a) defines the term "person" as "one or more
    individuals, partnerships, associations, organizations, labor organizations,
    corporations, legal representatives, trustees, trustees in bankruptcy, receivers,
    and fiduciaries."   The statute's plain language notably does not limit the
    definition of "person" to New Jersey residents or employees.
    A-1576-17T3
    26
    Furthermore, N.J.S.A. 10:5-5(e) declares that the definition of the term
    "employer" broadly includes "all persons as defined in subsection (a) of the
    section unless otherwise specifically exempt." (Emphasis added). Equally
    broadly, N.J.S.A. 10:5-12(a) prohibits the discriminatory refusal "to hire or
    employ" and the discriminatory discharge of "any individual" on the basis of
    that individual's protected characteristics, which include race, gender, religion,
    and disability, among others. (Emphasis added). The statute does not restrict
    the definition of "any individual" to New Jersey residents or employees. See
    also N.J.S.A. 10:5-13 (permitting "[a]ny person claiming to be aggrieved by an
    unlawful employment practice or unlawful discrimination" to file a complaint
    with the Division of Civil Rights, or to bring a lawsuit in the Superior Court).
    a.
    That said, defendants point out that the NJLAD's preamble contains
    more restrictive language that creates a potential interpretive ambiguity about
    the statute's coverage.      They assert this ambiguity undercuts plaintiff's
    interpretation.
    The preamble, found at N.J.S.A. 10:5-3, states in relevant part:
    The Legislature finds and declares that practices
    of discrimination against any of its inhabitants,
    because of . . . disability . . . are matters of concern to
    the government of the State, and that such
    discrimination threatens not only the rights and proper
    privileges of the inhabitants of the State but menaces
    A-1576-17T3
    27
    the institutions and foundations of a free democratic
    State . . . .
    The Legislature further declares its opposition to
    such practices of discrimination when directed against
    any person . . . in order that the economic prosperity
    and general welfare of the inhabitants of the State may
    be protected and ensured.
    The Legislature further finds that because of
    discrimination, people suffer personal hardships, and
    the State suffers a grievous harm.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    We recognize "[a] court may turn to a statute's preamble as an aid in
    determining legislative intent." DiProspero v. Penn, 
    183 N.J. 477
    , 496 (2005).
    A preamble "should be read in harmony with the statute that it introduces,
    whenever possible." 
    Ibid.
     However, "[t]o the extent that the preamble is at
    variance with the clear and unambiguous language of the statute, the preamble
    must give way." 
    Id. at 497
    .
    As underscored above, the first and second paragraphs of the NJLAD's
    preamble make reference to "inhabitants" of this State, when explaining the
    Legislature's intent in enacting the NJLAD. Although the NJLAD does not
    define the term "inhabitants," a more general statute, N.J.S.A. 1:1-2, directs us
    to construe the word "population . . . as synonymous with 'inhabitants.'" That
    Title 1 provision, in turn, defines the term "population" as "the population as
    shown by the latest Federal census effective within this State." N.J.S.A. 1:1 -2.
    A-1576-17T3
    28
    Thus, in enacting the NJLAD, the Legislature aimed to at least protect New
    Jersey inhabitants, i.e., residents, from the harmful effects of discrimination.
    Nonetheless, the preamble does not state that the NJLAD was intended
    to protect only New Jersey residents. Even within the preamble itself, the
    word "inhabitants" is not consistently used throughout the rest of the preamble,
    let alone the full statute. For instance, the second paragraph of the preamble
    declares the Legislature's "opposition to such practices of discrimination when
    directed against any person," not solely against inhabitants. N.J.S.A. 10:5-3
    (emphasis added).     The third paragraph further declares that because of
    discrimination, "people" – not just inhabitants – "suffer personal hardships."
    
    Ibid.
    As we have noted, the word "inhabitant" does not appear at all in the
    operative provisions of the statute outside of the preamble. Given that context,
    "the preamble must give way," DiProspero, 
    183 N.J. at 497
    , and it does not
    cloud our reading of the unambiguous and broader operative provisions of the
    NJLAD.
    We recently addressed a similar issue of statutory interpretation in
    Scheeler v. Atlantic City Mun. Joint Ins. Fund, 
    454 N.J. Super. 621
    , 624-25
    (App. Div. 2018), a decision involving the Open Public Records Act
    ("OPRA"), N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1 to -13. There, we considered whether an out-of-
    A-1576-17T3
    29
    state resident had standing to file an OPRA request, or whether rights under
    OPRA were limited to "citizens" of New Jersey based upon language
    contained in OPRA's preamble.
    We acknowledged in Scheeler that the Legislature's use of the term
    "citizens of this State" in the preamble of OPRA "arguably created an
    ambiguity[,]" about its breadth. Id. at 627. However, we determined that the
    ambiguity was "easily resolved" by reading the statute "sensibly" and
    considering "the context in which the phrase 'citizens of this State' is used, the
    terms the Legislature used in the rest of OPRA, and . . . the statute's history
    and purpose." Ibid. We held that "[b]ecause the more specific provisions of
    OPRA refer to 'any person,' and because OPRA is to be construed broadly to
    achieve the Legislature's over-arching goal of making public records freely
    available, . . . the right to request records under OPRA is not limited to
    'citizens' of New Jersey." Ibid. That same reasoning applies here.
    More to the point, we stated in dicta in Scheeler that the NJLAD's use of
    the term "inhabitants" in its preamble "does not mean that the [NJ]LAD only
    protects New Jersey residents and allows discrimination against visitors from
    other states." Id. at 631 n.4. We noted that the NJLAD's "specific provisions
    addressing    discrimination    in   housing,     employment[,]     and     public
    accommodations prohibit discrimination against           any 'person' or any
    A-1576-17T3
    30
    'individual.'" Ibid. (citing N.J.S.A. 10:5-4; N.J.S.A. 10:5-12). We reaffirm
    that observation here.
    b.
    Having carefully examined the NJLAD's text and extensive legislative
    history, we detect no expression of legislative intent to limit the statute's
    protections to job applicants who live in New Jersey, or to those employees
    who perform all of their employment functions in New Jersey. As a general
    matter, the Legislature has amended the NJLAD numerous times in order to
    expand its scope, to protect additional classes of people, and to allow more
    claims.   See Rodriguez v. Raymours Furniture Co., 
    225 N.J. 343
    , 357-58
    (2016) ("The Legislature's activity has been in one direction. It has acted only
    to strengthen the [NJ]LAD, adding more protections and for more classes of
    individuals.").   And, again, it is well-established that the NJLAD must be
    construed liberally toward its overarching goal of eradicating discrimination.
    Quinlan, 
    204 N.J. at 259
    ; Acevedo, 449 N.J. Super. at 190.
    We therefore conclude that, despite the inclusion of the term
    "inhabitants" in the preamble of the NJLAD, the Legislature did not intend to
    confine the scope of the statute's protections solely to plaintiffs and claimants
    A-1576-17T3
    31
    who reside in this State. 10
    2.
    Is There Legislative Intent to Override Another State's Laws?
    The next related question under section 6(1) of the Second Restatement
    is whether the Legislature has clearly directed that our courts must apply the
    NJLAD to cases where choice-of-law issues arise because of conflicting laws
    of other states. On this point, we are unpersuaded by plaintiff and the NELA-
    NJ that the Legislature has imposed such a choice-of-law mandate.11 Just
    10
    By analogy, the Consumer Fraud Act ("CFA"), N.J.S.A. 56:8-1 to -210, and
    the Conscientious Employee Protection Act ("CEPA"), N.J.S.A. 34:19-1 to -
    14, have been interpreted to allow certain out-of-state plaintiffs to pursue
    claims against New Jersey defendants under those statutes. See, e.g., Real v.
    Radir Wheels, Inc., 
    198 N.J. 511
    , 527 (2009) (holding a Missouri resident who
    purchased car via an internet auction without ever visiting New Jersey could
    assert CFA claim against New Jersey-based seller); Aguerre v. Schering-
    Plough, 
    393 N.J. Super. 459
    , 475-76 (App. Div. 2007) (finding Argentinian-
    nationals successfully asserted CEPA claims against their New Jersey-based
    employers). See also Feldman v. Hunterdon Radiological Assocs., 
    187 N.J. 228
    , 241 (2006) ("[C]ourts frequently compare CEPA to [NJ]LAD, applying
    the legal tests and frameworks developed under one to the other, 'because
    CEPA, like [the NJLAD], is a civil rights statute'" (quoting Kolb v. Burns, 
    320 N.J. Super. 467
    , 477 (App. Div. 1999))); D'Agostino v. Johnson & Johnson,
    Inc., 
    133 N.J. 516
    , 533 (1993) (holding that a common-law whistleblower
    claim brought by a Swiss-national plaintiff against a New Jersey-based
    defendant employer was governed by New Jersey law because "New Jersey
    law regulates conduct in New Jersey.").
    11
    Notably, the Attorney General has not joined in plaintiff's argument
    claiming a statutory choice-of-law "directive" within the meaning of section
    6(1) of the Second Restatement is intended to override contrary laws of other
    (continued)
    A-1576-17T3
    32
    because a New Jersey statute could embrace certain claims by out-of-state
    parties does not necessarily mean that those New Jersey laws inexorably must
    override contrary laws from other jurisdictions.
    A key purpose of our multi-factor choice-of-law jurisprudence, as
    embodied in the Second Restatement, is to promote interstate comity and due
    respect for the laws and interests of sister states, rather than automatically
    impose New Jersey law in some provincial or overly aggressive fashion. For
    example, our Supreme Court in In re Accutane, 235 N.J. at 254, recently ruled
    that the terms of the New Jersey Product Liability Act ("NJPLA") do not
    automatically apply to all plaintiffs from all jurisdictions who may be injured
    by products made in New Jersey but, instead, that the appropriate choice-of-
    law depends upon a balancing of Second Restatement factors under sections
    (continued)
    states. Although we are not bound to adopt the Attorney General's position,
    we give due deference to the Attorney General as the legal adviser to State
    Government, see N.J.S.A. 52:17A-4(e), and also because of the Attorney
    General's institutional role in enforcing the NJLAD and in overseeing the
    Division of Civil Rights, N.J.S.A. 10:5-8. See Quarto v. Adams, 
    395 N.J. Super. 502
    , 513 (App. Div. 2007) (recognizing the Attorney General's
    interpretation of a statute is entitled "to a degree of deference" because of his
    or her "special role as the sole legal adviser to most agencies of State
    Government").
    A-1576-17T3
    33
    6(2) and 145.12
    We reject plaintiff's suggestion that the Legislature has mandated our
    courts to bypass a multi-factor analysis in this case. To do so would run
    counter to the philosophy of the most-significant-relationship test and the
    choice-of-law jurisprudence pronounced by the Court in recent years. In re
    Accutane, 235 N.J. at 254; McCarrell, 227 N.J. at 573. We do not construe the
    NJLAD to bulldoze over the conflicting laws of other states that also have a
    nexus to the case.
    Moreover, the Legislature has shown that when it wishes to issue a
    "statutory directive" on choice-of-law, it knows how to do it. See, e.g., New
    Jersey Franchise Practices Act, N.J.S.A. 56:10-7.3(a)(2) (mandating that
    franchisors cannot require franchisees to waive their rights "otherwise
    available under the laws of this State"); Uniform Commercial Code, N.J.S.A.
    12A:1-301(a), (b) (directing that the law of New Jersey generally shall apply
    to a transaction "bearing an appropriate relation to this State," unless the
    parties agree to the contrary). No comparable language dictating choice-of-
    law appears in the NJLAD.        There is simply no "statutory directive" here
    qualifying under section 6(1).
    12
    After conducting that detailed analysis, the Court concluded in In re
    Accutane that the NJPLA applied to all 532 cases before it involving plaintiffs
    from numerous states suing a New Jersey drug manufacturer. Id. at 265.
    A-1576-17T3
    34
    V.
    Lacking a statutory directive, we now must consider how the Second
    Restatement's balancing factors in sections 6(2), 145, and 146 apply to the
    choice-of-law analysis for the claims pleaded in this case. We conduct that
    analysis by separately considering plaintiff's failure-to-promote claim and
    then, in turn, his wrongful discharge claim.
    A.
    The Failure-to-Promote Claim
    Plaintiff argues that, even though he is an Illinois resident who worked
    for defendants in Illinois, the law of New Jersey should govern his claim that
    Phibro and its agents discriminated against him by failing to consider him for
    the promotion to the new position. In particular, he emphasizes that the new
    position was in New Jersey, the company officials allegedly made the
    promotional decision in New Jersey, and the defendant company is based in
    New Jersey.
    As a threshold matter, defendants contend that plaintiff never undertook
    any steps to apply for the New Jersey position, and accordingly his failure -to-
    promote claim is not viable.      Plaintiff contends to the contrary that he
    repeatedly expressed interest in the post, and that defendants thwarted him
    from applying. We need not resolve that factual dispute here. The posture of
    A-1576-17T3
    35
    this case is on a motion to dismiss a claim on its face under Rule 4:6-2(e). As
    such, we must presume, for present purposes, that plaintiff's factual allegations
    pled in the complaint are true.      Printing Mart-Morristown v. Sharp Elecs.
    Corp., 
    116 N.J. 739
    , 772 (1989). Consequently, we proceed with the choice-
    of-law analysis with a supposition that plaintiff did, in fact, pursue the
    promotion, without prejudice to defendants demonstrating otherwise in the
    litigation after discovery.
    The trial court did not fully analyze the Second Restatement factors in
    its rulings. Instead, it chiefly relied on the choice-of-law aspects of this court's
    1995 opinion in Buccilli, a case that preceded the Supreme Court's 2008
    opinion in Camp Jaycee adopting the approach of sections 6 and 145 of the
    Second Restatement.
    In Buccilli, the plaintiff was a New Jersey resident working as a
    paralegal for the defendant law firm in its Philadelphia office. Buccilli, 
    283 N.J. Super. at 9
    . The firm also maintained an office in Cherry Hill, New
    Jersey. 
    Ibid.
     After the plaintiff was terminated, she filed an NJLAD claim in
    New Jersey Superior Court alleging sex discrimination. 
    Id. at 9-10
    . The trial
    court dismissed her claim "on the ground that it could be decided only in a
    Pennsylvania court" under Pennsylvania law, not the NJLAD. 
    Id. at 10, 13
    .
    A-1576-17T3
    36
    We reversed in Buccilli, holding that the plaintiff's claim could be
    adjudicated in our Superior Court, but under Pennsylvania law. 
    Id. at 13-15
    .
    We agreed with the trial court that "[o]nly Pennsylvania, not New Jersey,
    substantive law governs" because the "[p]laintiff's employment began and
    ended in Pennsylvania. She worked exclusively in that state and the conduct
    which she alleges was unlawful occurred there." 
    Id. at 10
    . Based on those
    facts, we held that "the damage claim of a New Jersey resident for her
    allegedly wrongful dismissal from out-of-state employment is governed by the
    law of the state in which she was employed." 
    Id. at 10-11
    . We reasoned that
    "making the rights of each of several co-workers dependent on his or her state
    of residence would be an entirely unreasonable result" from the employer's
    perspective. 
    Id. at 11-12
    .
    Although we do not believe the choice-of-law outcome in Buccilli is
    inconsistent with the Second Restatement factors, the trial court's dispositive
    reliance on that case in the present matter was misplaced.           The factual
    allegations before us, as pleaded in the complaint, are materially
    distinguishable from Buccilli.
    Indeed, in several respects, the present facts are the converse of Buccilli.
    Here, plaintiff resides outside of this state, and the defendant company is based
    in New Jersey. Unlike Ms. Buccilli, plaintiff worked for the company in his
    A-1576-17T3
    37
    state of residence, but sought a promotion to a position in New Jersey. He
    contends the discriminatory conduct by defendants occurred in New Jersey,
    whereas in Buccilli the alleged discriminatory conduct took place in
    Pennsylvania.
    Defendants and ANJMA focus upon passages in Buccilli in which we
    observed that Ms. Buccilli's "employment began and ended in Pennsylvania,"
    that she "worked exclusively in that state," and that "the conduct she alleges
    was unlawful occurred there." 
    Id. at 10
    . However, the defendants' business
    was located in Pennsylvania, and there was no nexus to New Jersey other than
    Ms. Buccilli's residency in this State.           We continue to agree those
    circumstances correctly tipped the scales in Buccilli in favor of the application
    of Pennsylvania law to that particular plaintiff's claims. 13
    Even so, in the wake of the Supreme Court's subsequent precedent in
    Camp Jaycee and its adoption of the Second Restatement factors, Buccilli
    should not be misread to impose a bright-line choice-of-law principle that all
    employment discrimination claims must be governed by the law of the state
    where a plaintiff exclusively or principally worked. Although a plaintiff's
    13
    Plaintiff, the NELA-NJ, and the Attorney General do not argue that we need
    to overrule or repudiate Buccilli in order to reverse the trial court's choice-of-
    law decision in this case.
    A-1576-17T3
    38
    place of work is surely an important consideration, it is not always dispositive.
    Other aspects of the case may at times override it.
    A rigorous application of sections 6(2), 145, and 146 factors to plaintiff's
    failure-to-promote claim shows that New Jersey law, not Illinois law, must
    govern that particular claim. Most of those factors are heavily influenced by
    the fact that the new position sought by plaintiff and other potential applicants
    was going to be located in this state, where the defendant company Phibro is
    based.
    For starters, we are persuaded that under section 6(2)(a), the "needs of
    the interstate . . . systems" are generally best served by applying the law of the
    state where a job opening will be filled.      Indeed, that coincides with the
    expressed desire of defendants and the ANJMA to have uniformity in the law
    applicable to the same group of employees or prospective employees. If a job
    vacancy is in New Jersey, it would be unwieldy for an employer to have each
    applicant's quest for the post individually governed by the law of the state or
    country in which he or she presently happens to live. Instead, it makes sense
    to have all applicants treated under one set of state laws. The "needs" of the
    system favor such uniformity in a hiring context.
    Turning to subsections (b) and (c), the policies and interests of this state
    and other jurisdictions are fairly accommodated by applying local law to an
    A-1576-17T3
    39
    employer's conduct in filling a job opening. There is little reason to think that
    other jurisdictions would want their laws extended to hiring decisions made
    elsewhere, particularly if that meant, reciprocally, that employers in their own
    states would have to grapple with applying the laws of numerous other
    jurisdictions each time they filled a position that drew job-seekers from other
    places.
    Next, subsection (d) concerns the "protection of justified expectations."
    Here, a person such as plaintiff seeking a job in New Jersey would reasonably
    expect the laws of New Jersey to govern the hiring and selection process. So
    too would Phibro, as a New Jersey employer. Indeed, although they do not
    literally cover plaintiff's claims, the agreements drafted by Phibro reciting that
    New Jersey law governs various other aspects of plaintiff's work relationship
    are at least evidence of such company expectations.
    As for subsection (e), the "basic policies" underlying antidiscrimination
    laws favor applying the NJLAD to the hiring of workers who will be employed
    in this state. The strong and expansive public policies of the NJLAD, which
    we have already discussed, would be weakened if each job applicant did not
    get the full benefit of those protections.
    Further, the values of "certainty, predictability, and uniformity of result"
    under subsection (f) are logically advanced by having New Jersey
    A-1576-17T3
    40
    antidiscrimination laws apply to each applicant for a job located in New
    Jersey. So would the "ease" in determining and applying that single set of
    state laws, consistent with section 6(2)(e).
    The enumerated factors of sections 145 and 146 of the Second
    Restatement for tort-based claims also point towards applying New Jersey law
    to plaintiff's failure-to-promote claim.
    Regarding section 146, it is unclear where the "place of injury" occurred
    because discovery has not been conducted. We recognize that the "injury" to a
    disappointed job-seeker arguably is felt by each applicant in the place he or
    she resides, here being Illinois. Even so, the complaint alleges that the place
    where the discriminatory denial of the promotion occurred was New Jersey,
    although that locale is not conceded by defendants. Because the place of
    injury relating to this claim is not easily identified from the reco rd, In re
    Accutane, 235 N.J. at 260, we must turn to section 145.
    Under section 145(1), which cross references the factors in section 6 we
    have already discussed, New Jersey plainly has the most significant
    relationship to the failure-to-promote claim. The various "contacts" set forth
    in section 145(2)(a) through (d) weigh in favor of applying New Jersey law to
    this failure-to-promote claim.
    A-1576-17T3
    41
    Regarding section 145(2)(a), the place of plaintiff's injury is, as we have
    noted, debatable.    In addition, under section 145(2)(b), the place of the
    defendants' alleged wrongful conduct is also presently unclear.              The
    considerations of domicile, residency, nationality, place of incorporation, and
    place of business under section 145(2)(c) have mixed aspects. But the overall
    weight of those considerations manifestly tips in favor of New Jersey, the state
    of Phibro's business and where the new position was to be located. Moreover,
    under section 145(2)(d), New Jersey would be the place where the parties '
    future relationship would be "centered" upon filling the position.
    All in all, the Second Restatement analysis under sections 6, 145, and
    146 produces a logical and overarching nexus to New Jersey with respect to
    plaintiff's failure-to-promote claim. The trial court erred in ruling otherwise
    and applying Illinois law to that particular cause of action. We accordingly
    reverse the court's dismissal of that claim.
    B.
    The Wrongful Discharge Claim
    As the Attorney General aptly recognizes, the choice-of-law analysis for
    plaintiff's wrongful discharge claim is more difficult than the failure -to-
    promote claim, especially given the present state of the limited record. The
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    state with the most significant relationship to that particular claim is not yet
    readily apparent. We mention in that regard a few preliminary considerations.
    Plaintiff worked for defendants in Illinois, the state where he also lived.
    He was removed from that Illinois position by his New Jersey-based employer.
    The parties do not agree on the location(s) where the company officers made
    the decision to fire plaintiff. The record is also uninformative about the state
    where plaintiff allegedly acted improperly at the trade show, and exactly where
    the ensuing communications took place that led to his removal.
    Given this context, the factor-by-factor Second Restatement analysis
    may differ with respect to plaintiff's wrongful discharge claim, as compared to
    his failure-to-promote claim. For example, plaintiff's post-discharge conduct
    in obtaining unemployment benefits under the laws of Illinois arguably may
    affect section 6(2)(d) ("the protection of justified expectations"). 14 In addition,
    because the job from which plaintiff was fired was located at the Illinois
    office, the company arguably would have reasonable expectations that all of its
    supervisors and employees at that office, including plaintiff, would be
    14
    In making this observation, we do not suggest that plaintiff is estopped from
    invoking New Jersey's antidiscrimination laws because he obtained
    unemployment benefits from the only state in which he presumably could seek
    them. We leave it to the trial court to assess to what extent plaintiff's action in
    obtaining that benefit under Illinois law is an important facet of the analysis.
    A-1576-17T3
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    commonly governed by Illinois employment laws. The "place of injury" under
    sections 145(2)(a) and 146 also seems to point to Illinois.
    On the other hand, if plaintiff can establish that the company's decision
    to fire him was made or centered in New Jersey, that would be a counterweight
    on the New Jersey side of the scale. Many other facts and factors may also
    bear upon the calculus.
    We do not adopt plaintiff's argument that if the decision to terminate him
    was made by individuals physically located in New Jersey, that singular nexus
    must necessarily overcome all other factors that may weigh elsewhere. For
    example, if hypothetically the firing decision were made by company officials
    while they all were on a business trip in Florida, that happenstance surely
    would not require Florida law to apply. The state where the decision was
    made – even assuming that is a singular place that can be ascertained – is
    simply one of many factors in the overall mix in identifying the state having
    the most significant relationship to that claim.
    Rather than attempt to resolve this discrete choice-of-law assessment on
    an incomplete and disputed record, we remand that issue for a fuller
    development of the facts. Those facts should enable a new, more informed
    ruling by the trial court applying sections 6(2), 145, and 146 factors of the
    Second Restatement to plaintiff's wrongful discharge claim. The trial court
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    shall oversee the discovery needed to develop these issues, and reconsider its
    choice-of-law ruling upon renewed motion practice.
    We do not forecast the outcome of this process, except to note that it
    would be legally permissible for New Jersey law to apply to plaintiff's failure-
    to-promote claim and for Illinois law to apply to his wrongful discharge claim.
    Conversely, the application of New Jersey law to both claims remains a
    conceivable option as well, depending on the development of the record
    affecting the Second Restatement factors.
    VI.
    We conclude with two observations that concern the practical
    significance of our decision today.
    First, we are cognizant that the choice-of-law analysis becomes
    increasingly more complicated in our world as employees and their supervisors
    more often perform their work tasks remotely in multiple locations rather than
    in a traditional common physical location. The "office" where an individual
    works can be an elusive or non-existent concept these days. Work is now
    conducted often via digital means transcending jurisdictional boundaries.
    These trends invariably complicate the application of geographic factors in
    determining which states' laws apply to an employment relationship, absent
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    agreement of the parties.    We do not presume in this opinion to begin to
    resolve those innumerable hypothetical scenarios.
    Our second parting observation is that we expect employers will attempt
    to resolve uncertainty about the governing law by including in employment
    agreements clear and explicit choice-of-law provisions.        Of course, such
    provisions in form employment contracts must be sufficiently clear in order to
    bind the parties, Martindale v. Sandvik, Inc., 
    173 N.J. 76
    , 95-96 (2002), and
    not contrary to constitutional or statutory principles.      In any event, we
    anticipate that the analytic difficulties of the present case – in which there is
    no applicable written employment contract containing an enforceable choice -
    of-law provision – will occur less often in the future.
    VII.
    Reversed on the failure-to-promote claim, and vacated and remanded on
    the wrongful discharge claim, in accordance with the terms of this opinion.
    The trial court shall convene a case management conference within
    thirty days. The amici each shall duly advise the trial court whether they wish
    to continue to participate in some fashion at the trial level in any further
    proceedings. We do not retain jurisdiction.
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