DocketNumber: 98,847
Citation Numbers: 2004 OK 1, 84 P.3d 728
Judges: Boudreau, Edmondson, Hargrave, Hodges, Kauger, Lavender, Opala, Watt, Winchester
Filed Date: 1/13/2004
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
¶ 1 At issue in this matter is whether the plaintiff stated a cause of action for wrongful termination under Burk v. K-Mart Corp., 770 P.2d 24 (Okla.1989). This Court holds that the plaintiff has stated a cause of action under Burk such that his petition should not have been dismissed for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
¶ 2 Silver was a cook for CPC-Sherwood Manor, Inc. a nursing home. In his affidavit, Silver stated he arrived for work at 4:50 a.m. on December 9, 2001, and began working immediately. At 5:15 a.m., Silver developed diarrhea and began vomiting a few minutes later. Silver alleged he told the nursing home’s assistant administrator, “I need to go to the emergency room. I’m sick. I’ve got diarrhea and I’m throwing up, and I need to go to the emergency room.” He said the administrator responded, “You’re not going no damn where. If you leave from there I’m going to dismiss you.” Silver then punched out and went to the emergency room, where he was treated for dehydration and an intestinal infection. He said that the following Monday, he took the emergency room papers to the assistant administrator, and she allegedly told him, “I don’t want them. I told you if you left that damn job what I was gonna do. You don’t work here no more.”
¶ 3 Silver sued the nursing home for wrongful termination. In his amended petition, he alleged he was fired in violation of the public policy reflected in certain Oklahoma Administrative Code provisions of the State Department of Health. The nursing home moved to dismiss on the grounds that public policy for a wrongful termination claim cannot be found in agency rules. The trial court dismissed the action and the Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the decision over a vigorous dissent. This Court granted certio-rari review.
¶4 The Burk public policy exception to the employment at will doctrine “rests on the notion that in a civilized society the [right] of employers to discharge at-will employees is necessarily balanced against the rights of the public at large as found in existing law.” Clinton v. Logan Co. Election Bd., 2001 OK 52, 29 P.3d 543, 545. This exception was adopted to “[serve] the cause of equity as well as the interests of the marketplace.” Burk, 770 P.2d at 29. Burk held that “the circumstances which present an actionable tort under Oklahoma law [include] where an employee is discharged for refusing to act in violation of an established and well-defined public policy.” Id. “To prevail on a claim of wrongful discharge in violation of Oklahoma’s public policy, a plaintiff, must first identify an Oklahoma public policy goal that is well established, clear and compelling and articulated in existing constitutional, statutory or jurisprudential law.” Barker v. State Ins. Fund, 2001 OK 94, 40 P.3d 463, 468 (citing Clinton, 29 P.3d at 546).
¶ 5 This matter challenges the granting of a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. “When reviewing a motion to dismiss, the court must take as true all of the challenged pleading’s allegations together with all reasonable inferences which may be drawn from them.” Indiana Nat’l Bank v. Department of Human Servs., 880 P.2d 371, 375 (Okla.1994). When a trial court is considering its ruling on such a motion, it “should not ask whether the petition points to an appropriate statute or legal theory, but whether relief is possible under any set of facts that could be established consistent with the allegations”. Id. at 375-376. By this standard, the trial court was obliged to ask whether the plaintiff’s allegation, that he
¶ 6 This Court need not mire itself in the controversy which confronted the Court of Civil Appeals concerning whether certain agency rules promulgated by the Oklahoma Department of Health provide a permissible source of public policy in this matter. Oklahoma has enunciated the following public policy relating to food in title 63 (Public Health and Safety), chapter 1 (Public Health Code), article 11 (Food), part A (General Provisions). Specifically, it provides in part:
The following acts and the causing thereof within the State of Oklahoma are hereby prohibited:
(a) The manufacture, sale, or delivery, holding or offering for sale of any food that is adulterated or misbranded.
[[Image here]]
(c) the receipt in commerce of any food that is adulterated or misbranded, and the delivery or proffered delivery thereof for pay or otherwise.
Okla. Stat. tit., § 1-1102 (2001). Adulterated food is defined at title 63, section 1-1109 as follows:
A food shall be deemed to be adulterated: ⅜ * *
(a)(4) if it has been produced, prepared, packed, or held under insanitary conditions whereby it may have been rendered diseased, unwholesome, or injurious to health;
[[Image here]]
(emphasis added).
¶ 7 Sections l-1102(a), (c) and l-1109(a)(4) articulate, in a clear and compelling fashion, a well-defined, firmly established, state public policy prohibiting the holding, preparing, or delivering of food prepared under conditions whereby it may have been rendered diseased, unwholesome, or injurious to health. The nursing home’s alleged failure to follow this policy states a cause of action under Burk sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. This Court expresses no opinion as to the sufficiency or quality of the plaintiffs evidence, yet to be presented, concerning the nursing home’s reason for dismissing the cook.
CERTIORARI PREVIOUSLY GRANTED; OPINION OF COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS VACATED; ORDER OF TRIAL COURT REVERSED; CAUSE REMANDED.