Balsamo v. University of New Hampshire et al
Filing
41
///ORDER granting 14 Motion for Summary Judgment. So Ordered by Judge Paul J. Barbadoro.(jna)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
John Balsamo
Case No. 10-cv-500-PB
Opinion No. 2012 DNH 048
v.
University System of
New Hampshire, et al.
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
John Balsamo was fired in September 2007 after working as a
maintenance technician for the University of New Hampshire
(“UNH”) Housing Office for slightly over one year.
He brings
suit against UNH, the University System of New Hampshire
(“USNH”), the President of UNH, and three UNH employees.
Balsamo claims that UNH and USNH are liable for breach of
contract because they terminated him without adhering to the
policies governing the termination process.
Balsamo also argues
that defendants violated his constitutional right to procedural
due process.
Defendants move for summary judgment, and for the
reasons provided below, I grant defendants’ motion.
I.
A.
BACKGROUND
Facts
1.
Hiring & Orientation
On August 3, 2006, Balsamo was offered the position of
General Maintenance Technician at the UNH Housing Office.
The
offer letter stated that his appointment would be full-time.
Offer Letter, Doc. No. 14-3.
Aside from noting that his
employment would begin with an “introductory period” of up to
six months, the letter did not include a durational term of
employment.
Id.
Balsamo began work on August 14.
Welcome
Letter, Doc. No. 14-5.
Balsamo received a welcome letter on August 22 that
contained a packet of materials detailing benefits programs as
well as an invitation to an August 28 orientation session.
Id.
At or before the orientation session, which he attended, he
received a copy of the 2006 edition of the USNH Operating Staff
Handbook (“Handbook”).
VanHorn Aff. ¶ 5, Doc. No. 14-6.
He
read through the Handbook, and was aware of its statement that
USNH’s online Policy Manual included more specific information
about the University’s policies.
Balsamo Dep. at 21-23, Doc.
No. 14-7.
At some point that month, Balsamo also received a packet on
discrimination and harassment that included a memorandum, two
2
flyers, and UNH’s Discrimination and Discriminatory Harassment
Policy [hereinafter Discrimination Policy].
Harassment Packet, Doc. No. 14-9.
Discriminatory
Also occurring at some
unspecified time around the start of his employment, Balsamo was
advised that the terms of his employment would be governed by
USNH and UNH policies.
2.
Balsamo Aff. ¶ 2, Doc. No. 16-7.
Policies, Documents, and Disclaimers
(a)
Operating Staff Handbook
The Operating Staff Handbook given to Balsamo at or before
his orientation session contains a preface that reads, in its
entirety:
This handbook is describing employment conditions and
providing an overview of policies and practices for
status Operating Staff of [USNH]. Please note that
the information contained in this handbook is intended
as a guideline only. While the handbook summarizes
plans, programs, and policies, the exact terms of the
written documents for these plans, programs, and
policies take precedent [sic]. USNH reserves the
right to make changes to this handbook and any such
plans, programs, and policies at any time without
prior notice. More specific information is available
in USNH’s online Policy Manual, which may be accessed
through your campus Human Resources web page, or at
www.usnholpm.unh.edu. This handbook is not and should
not be interpreted as a contract of employment between
any current Operating Staff member or former Operating
Staff member and USNH. If you have questions about
any of the information in this handbook, you are
encouraged to consult your campus Human Resources
Office or the University System Human Resources
Office.
Handbook, Doc. No. 14-18 at 2.
3
The Handbook also contains a section titled “Involuntary
Termination,” which includes a subsection titled “Performance
Based Reasons.”
The paragraph under that subsection reads:
If your job performance is not meeting expectations,
your supervisor will provide you with verbal and
written notification. This notification will include
a description of the expected improvements and a time
frame in which to achieve them. If your job
performance does not improve, your employment will be
terminated. The University System reserves the right
to bypass these steps and terminate a staff member
immediately if, in its sole judgment, the nature of
the situation justifies immediate termination. In
either case, you will receive a letter of termination
describing the reason for the termination, the date on
which your employment will end, and the procedure for
filing a grievance.
Id. at 9-10 (emphasis added).
(b)
Online Policy Manual
The online Policy Manual (“OLPM”) referenced in the
Handbook’s preface contains a number of policies in various
sections that are relevant to employment and to termination
procedures.
One provision in the Appointments and Employment
Relationships Section1 states, “A status appointment[2] is
normally reserved for those with continued employment
1
Defendants have moved to strike Balsamo’s exhibit that contains
this section of the OLPM. For reasons elaborated in note 9,
infra, I deny that motion as moot.
2
Balsamo asserts that he was a full-time status employee.
Opp. to Summ. J. at 3, Doc. No. 16-1.
4
P.’s
expectations which, however, shall not be construed to imply a
commitment or a contractual obligation to provide employment.”
Employment Section § 6.2.4.1, Doc. No. 16-5.
Another provision
in that section reads, “Appointments are based on a Fiscal Year,
which is 12 consecutive months, . . . or on an academic year of
approximately nine months[.]”
Id. § 6.2.5.
The Termination Section includes a number of provisions
concerning the involuntary termination of an employee.
One
provision states that poor performance can be a reason for
involuntary discharge, and notes that an employee may be
terminated after evaluative steps and constructive discipline
are unsuccessful in remedying the problems in performance.
Termination Section § 9.8.4, Doc. No. 14-12.
Another grounds
for termination is destructive or detrimental action.
9.10.1.
Id. §
The provision explaining that category -- which
includes serious crimes, insubordination, and grievous acts -states that a “staff member may be terminated immediately
without further notice” if “the staff member’s actions are so
destructive or detrimental that they cannot be tolerated[.]”
Id. § 9.10.1.
The provision on grievous acts indicates that an
“employee may be terminated for serious grievous acts of
violation of policy . . . including[,] but not limited to[,]
guilt in sexual harassment, failure to comply with substance
5
abuse and/or safety policies, or the conflict of interest
policy.”
Id. § 9.10.1.3.
The OLPM’s Discrimination and Discriminatory Harassment
Section [hereinafter Discrimination Section] deals with
discriminatory and harassing behaviors and the process for
handling allegations of offending conduct.
Section, Doc. No. 14-16.
Discrimination
One subsection details UNH’s policy
regarding the formal complaint process, a process to be used as
an alternative when informal resolution is unsuccessful.
5.9.1.
Id. §
According to that subsection, faculty and staff have up
to sixty days from the date of an incident to file a formal
complaint, and students have twelve months to file after an
incident.
Id. § 5.9.2.
An administrator is to make a
preliminary assessment, and the complaint process will proceed
if the administrator determines discriminatory harassment may
have occurred.
Id. § 5.9.4.
An investigation commences when a
complainant submits a written, signed complaint to the
Affirmative Action and Equity Office, and the Office then
“provide[s] a copy of the complainant’s signed complaint to the
accused person, together with information as to the policy.”
Id. § 5.9.5.
The accused is to be promptly interviewed, and
“[t]hereafter, a reasonable effort will be made to investigate
the disputed facts of the case, using corroborating sources of
6
information (including witnesses) identified by the complainant
and the accused.”
Id.
If a resolution is not possible, the
Director of the Affirmative Action and Equity office provides
the appropriate administrator with its findings and conclusions,
along with a recommendation for action.
administrator then renders a judgment.
Id. 5.9.7.
Id.
The
An accused who is
unsatisfied may appeal the judgment through grievance
procedures.
Id. § 5.9.8.
In addition to the policies enumerated in the various
sections of the OLPM, an individual browsing through the online
manual would also come across two disclaimers.
The OLPM menu
page contains the following statement:
This On-Line Policy Manual contains policies adopted
by the University System Board of Trustees, the
Presidents’ Council (also known as Administrative
Board), the Chancellor’s office (also know[n] as the
University System Administration), and each of the
USNH institutions . . . .
We have published only
those policies which the promulgating body determined
should be distributed through this mechanism.
Although every effort has been made to make this
manual accurate and up-to-date, we can not [sic]
guarantee that it is completely accurate. . . .
Please also note that this compilation of policies is
presented solely for the convenience of the user and
is not a contract of employment and cannot be
construed to establish rights beyond those provided
for in the official and current policies of USNH and
its institutions. The policies published in this
manual are subject to amendment and repeal at any time
and without notice.
7
OLPM Main Menu, Doc. No. 16-6.
In addition to that statement on the menu page, each webpage that contains a given OLPM section also includes a
disclaimer at the top of the page.
That disclaimer reads:
“These policies may be amended at any time, do not constitute an
employment contract, and are provided here only for ease of
reference and without any warranty of accuracy.”
See, e.g.,
Affirmative Action Section, Doc. No. 14-10; Termination Section,
Doc. No. 14-12.
(c)
Hardcopy of OLPM Section
In addition to being directed to the online OLPM, around
the time he was hired Balsamo also received a hardcopy of UNH’s
Discrimination Policy in a packet on discrimination.
The
hardcopy is titled “Policy,” and appears to be a verbatim
reproduction of the section of the OLPM that bears the same
title; it is also organized and numbered in the same manner as
its OLPM cognate.
Compare Discrimination Section, Doc. No. 14-
16, with Discrimination/Harassment Packet at 8-18, Doc. No. 149.
Although the document given to Balsamo does not contain
either disclaimer present on the OLPM, it does contain the
following statement at the top of the first page: “The section
references in this policy correspond to the University System of
New Hampshire On-Line Policy Manual, which contains this
8
Discrimination and Discriminatory Harassment Policy as adopted
by the University of New Hampshire.
This policy may be found
on-line at http://usnholpm.unh.edu/UNH/V.Pers/[.]”
Discrimination/Harassment Packet at 8, Doc. No. 14-9.
3.
Employment & Termination
A few months after Balsamo started work, two female
employees approached an administrator with concerns about
Balsamo’s conduct, explaining that his manner of interacting
with them had made them uncomfortable.
Meehan Aff. ¶ 4, Doc.
No. 14-2; Meehan Letter to Balsamo, Doc. No. 14-38.
A letter
jointly signed by Balsamo and a UNH administrator stated that
although Balsamo had not intended to make the female employees
uncomfortable, he agreed to “end [] the behaviors in question”
and treat students and employees with appropriate respect.
Meehan Letter to Balsamo, Doc. No. 14-38.
Approximately seven months later, in June 2007, an
individual sent an email about Balsamo through the UNH
“ReportIt!” online portal, a system established to enable
members of the university community to submit confidential
reports on issues of bias, prejudice, and discrimination.
Sorrentino Aff. ¶¶ 5, Doc. No. 14-20.
The email attributed to
Balsamo various statements denigrating the physical state of a
student apartment complex and disparaging its residents.
9
Id.;
Warning Letter at 1, Doc. No. 14-22.
In a meeting with UNH
administrators, Balsamo admitted that he “could have seen
[himself] saying these things,” but he contended that he was
entitled to speak his mind and he had not intended residents of
the apartment complex to hear him.
No. 14-22.
Warning Letter at 1, Doc.
At the meeting, UNH officials also took the time to
address separate issues that had caused concern about Balsamo’s
conduct.
They reprimanded Balsamo for an incident where he
intentionally “burned out” the tires in a University pick-up
truck and then dissembled when confronted with the evidence, and
for offhand comments he had made to student workers about
smoking marijuana.
8.
Id. at 2-3; Williams Aff. ¶ 5, Doc. No. 14-
A jointly signed letter summarized the meeting, and
concluded with a warning that Balsamo could face termination if
he engaged in any additional inappropriate conduct.
Warning
Letter at 4, Doc. No. 14-22.
Just a few months later, in September 2007, UNH received
troubling reports from students and university employees about
Balsamo’s conduct.
Williams Aff. ¶ 9, Doc. No. 14-8.
After
investigating the reports and determining that Balsamo had
committed serious infractions, UNH administrators called in
Balsamo for another meeting.
Id. ¶ 12-13.
10
At the September 25
meeting, Balsamo contested the underlying facts and the severity
of the matters presented.
Id. ¶ 16.
The day after the meeting, UNH administrators telephoned
Balsamo and read him a letter entitled “Letter of Involuntary
Termination.”
Id. ¶ 18.
The letter stated that although
Balsamo denied many of the accusations, much of his
inappropriate conduct had been corroborated by other evidence.
Termination Letter at 2, Doc. No. 14-27.
The letter detailed
various incidents involving Balsamo in addition to those that
were the subjects of prior meetings.
For example, the letter
stated that Balsamo made “[d]erogatory, sexually explicit verbal
remarks [] about female students [] and to female co-workers”;
his non-verbal behavior repeatedly caused female employees
discomfort; he would openly discuss his current marijuana use
with students; he got “wasted” with a student and expressed
interest to get high with a resident; he made inappropriate
comments about his coworkers’ attire, including a “remark that a
coworker was wearing green panties with white pants”; he made
jokes with racial undertones, including a “racist joke about an
Indian with cancer being referred to as a ‘chemosabi’”; he
accessed dating websites for extended periods of time during
work hours; he would respond differently to maintenance requests
from female students; he used “foul language in the presence of
11
other employees and apartment residents” and at least once
directed profanities at a male employee; and he was known as
having a “lead foot” when driving UNH vehicles and had lied to
his supervisors about being pulled over for speeding.
Id. at 1-
2.
The letter recounted the “past corrective action
discussions” involving Balsamo, and stated that his “repeated
and unwelcome conduct violates the University’s strong
commitment to maintaining learning and work environments [] free
from discriminatory harassment and our department’s standards of
performance and conduct.”
Id. at 3-4.
Accordingly, the letter
notified Balsamo that his employment with UNH was terminated.
Id. at 4.
It also directed Balsamo to refrain from returning to
UNH property without permission, and from initiating contact
with any employee or resident about the matter.
4.
Id.
Grievance Hearing
On October 11, Balsamo filed a grievance form pursuant to
UNH’s “FAIR” grievance procedure, and cited three provisions of
UNH’s policies that had been violated when UNH involuntarily
terminated his employment.
FAIR Notice Form, Doc. No. 14-28.
He cited the provision in the Termination Section of the OLPM
governing involuntary termination due to performance, the
provision in that Section governing involuntary termination for
12
destructive or detrimental action, and the entire Discrimination
Section.
Id.; Termination Section, Doc. No. 14-12;
Discrimination Section, Doc. No. 14-16.
Vilmarie Sanchez, a UNH Human Resource Partner, wrote back
and asked Balsamo to explain, in writing, how the policies
Balsamo cited had been violated.
29.
Sanchez Letter, Doc. No. 14-
Along with her letter, Sanchez sent paper copies of the
OLPM policies Balsamo alleged had been violated.
Id.
The
copies of those sections were in formats identical to those on
the OLPM, but they did not contain any of the disclaimers
present on the OLPM.
See id.
On October 22, Balsamo responded by letter.
He contended
that the University had violated his rights and its own internal
policies by: failing to sufficiently investigate and adjudicate
the complaints of discriminatory harassment against him; firing
him for conduct not rising to the level of discriminatory
harassment or serious grievous acts; and failing to administer
step discipline if the reason for his termination was based on
performance.
Balsamo Letter, Doc. No. 14-30.
On November 29, Sanchez wrote to Balsamo with information
about the grievance hearing.
Grievance Letter, Doc. No. 14-31.
The letter noted that the hearing on his grievance would be held
on December 13 and listed the three individuals who would sit on
13
the grievance panel to hear his case.
Id. at 1.
The
individuals comprising the panel were UNH staff members that had
no connection to the parties or events involved.
at 78-79, Doc. No. 14-7.
Balsamo Dep.
Sanchez’s letter named three witnesses
that would be called in response to Balsamo’s grievance
complaint and instructed Balsamo to provide notice by December 6
if he planned to call witnesses or to have a non-attorney
advocate present at the hearing. Grievance Letter at 2, Doc. No.
14-31.
Balsamo responded by letter dated December 5.
He explained
that he would be unable to call any witnesses at the hearing
because he would not be able to present a coherent defense
without first speaking to the witnesses he would ask to testify,
and UNH had instructed him to refrain from contacting its
employees.
Reply to Grievance Letter at 1, Doc. No. 14-32.
Balsamo also requested the opportunity to speak with the
witnesses identified by the opposing side and to receive copies
of any statements they had made.
Id.
On December 12, the day before the hearing, Sanchez
addressed Balsamo’s concerns in a letter.
Doc. No. 16-11.
December 12 Letter,
She explained that she had been sensitive to
the possibility that Balsamo would wish to call witnesses, and
had previously offered to facilitate contact with any UNH
14
employee who Balsamo thought might testify on his behalf.
Id.
She clarified that she had not intended that she would speak to
those potential witnesses herself, but she would have enabled
Balsamo to communicate with them.
Id.
Sanchez noted that
Balsamo had not offered any names, and so she had not contacted
anybody on his behalf.
Id.
Balsamo contradicts her account,
however, claiming that he did provide Sanchez with the names of
several student workers whom he wanted to call as witnesses, and
that Sanchez never contacted them.
14-7.
Balsamo Dep. at 85, Doc. No.
Attached to her letter, Sanchez provided Balsamo with
written statements from the witnesses who would speak against
him.
December 12 Letter at 3, Doc. No. 16-11.
She informed
Balsamo that although he had not had the chance to speak with
them, “it is at the hearing you will have the opportunity to
speak to and to question the respondents and the witnesses.”
December 12 Letter at 3, Doc. No. 16-11.
The grievance hearing occurred as scheduled on December 13,
and two former colleagues of Balsamo testified.
Their testimony
was consistent with the statements that had been provided to
Balsamo, and focused on Balsamo’s comments about drug use and
his repeated, inappropriate conduct in regard to female
students.
See Balsamo Dep. at 86-87, Doc. No. 14-7; Switzer’s
Statement, Doc. No. 14-33; Tripp’s Statement, Doc. No. 14-34.
15
In addition to the incidents listed in the termination letter,
the witnesses noted further troublesome behavior by Balsamo.
For example, one witness stated that Balsamo would regularly
tell his coworkers, in graphic terms, that he would like to
sleep with various female students, and that Balsamo would plan
his maintenance schedule so that he would arrive at female
students’ dorm rooms as they came out of the shower in the
morning.
See Tripp’s Statement, Doc. No. 14-34.
The panel ruled against Balsamo.
On January 2, 2008, the
University President sent a letter to Balsamo informing him that
he concurred with the determination of the grievance panel that
there was no evidence of UNH policy violations, and the
termination of Balsamo’s employment would stand.
Letter, Doc. No. 14-35.
President’s
Balsamo did not appeal the President’s
ruling by petitioning the Chancellor.
Balsamo Dep. at 88-89,
Doc. No. 14-7; OLPM Employee Complaint and Grievance Procedures
Section § 12.3.1.8, Doc. No. 14-36.
B.
Procedural History
Balsamo brought suit in this court, asserting state law
claims against his former employer, its president, and three of
its employees for breach of contract, breach of the duty of good
faith and fair dealing, wrongful discharge, and intentional
interference with a contractual relationship.
16
He also alleged a
violation of his federal constitutional rights to due process,
free speech, and equal protection.
Defendants brought a motion
for judgment on the pleadings, which I granted in respect to
Balsamo’s claims for wrongful discharge, breach of the duty of
good faith and fair dealing, intentional interference with a
contractual relationship, and his free speech and equal
protection claims.
Order, Doc. No. 12 .
I also granted
defendants’ motion with respect to Balsamo’s breach of contract
claim against the individual employees.
Id.
I allowed the breach of contract claim to proceed against
the institutional defendants because, even though Balsamo had
not identified the specific personnel policies that would create
a contractual relationship between himself and his employer, his
allegations were sufficiently particular to withstand dismissal
at that early stage of the litigation.
Id. at 8-9.
I also
allowed Balsamo’s procedural due process claim to proceed based
on the possibility that a contractual agreement had given
Balsamo a property interest protected by the due process clause.
Id. at 20-21.
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
A summary judgment motion should be granted when the record
reveals "no genuine dispute as to any material fact and that the
17
movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law."
Civ. P. 56(a).
Fed. R.
The evidence submitted in support of the motion
must be considered in the light most favorable to the nonmoving
party, drawing all reasonable inferences in its favor.
See
Navarro v. Pfizer Corp., 261 F.3d 90, 94 (1st Cir. 2001).
A party seeking summary judgment must first identify the
absence of any genuine issue of material fact.
Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986).
Celotex Corp. v.
The burden then shifts to
the nonmoving party to "produce evidence on which a reasonable
finder of fact, under the appropriate proof burden, could base a
verdict for it; if that party cannot produce such evidence, the
motion must be granted."
Ayala-Gerena v. Bristol Myers-Squibb
Co., 95 F.3d 86, 94 (1st Cir. 1996); see Celotex, 477 U.S. at
323.
III.
ANALYSIS
Balsamo contends that UNH’s adoption and dissemination of
policies related to employment and employee termination gave
rise to a contract between UNH and himself.
He argues that UNH
breached the terms of that contract, as well as his
constitutional due process rights, when it failed to accord him
the procedural protections set out in its policies before
terminating him.
18
Balsamo identifies a number of specific policies from the
OLPM that he contends were not followed.
For example, he urges
that UNH violated provisions of the Discrimination Policy by
failing to properly investigate and adjudicate the complaints of
discriminatory harassment lodged against him; failing to
interview those who would vouch for his version of events;
failing to provide him with a copy of a signed complaint
detailing the charges against him; and failing to abide by the
sixty day limitation for filing a complaint after an incident.
He argues that even if he was terminated for poor performance
rather than discriminatory harassment –- a fact that he contests
–- UNH violated provisions of its Termination Policy by
immediately terminating him for incidents that were not
sufficiently egregious to qualify as serious grievous acts, and
for terminating him without first taking evaluative steps and
then imposing constructive discipline.
Regardless of whether UNH followed each of the policies
implicated by Balsamo’s contentions, I conclude that summary
judgment is appropriate.
Balsamo was an at-will employee who
had no contractual right to enforce UNH’s policies.
The
disclaimers present on the OLPM are sufficient to prevent its
policies from acquiring contractual force, and Balsamo’s
arguments seeking to avoid the effect of those disclaimers are
19
unavailing.
Finally, because Balsam does not have a protected
property interest in continued employment, his due process claim
also necessarily fails.
I turn first to Balsamo’s contract
claim.
A.
Contract Claim
1.
Legal Background
Under New Hampshire law, “the at-will status of an
employment relationship is one of prima facie construction.”
Butler v. Walker Power, Inc., 137 N.H. 432, 435 (1993) (citation
and internal quotation marks omitted); see Panto v. Moore Bus.
Forms, Inc., 130 N.H. 730, 739 (1988).
Stated differently, when
an employment relationship does not explicitly provide for a
definite duration, it is presumed to be at-will.
N.H. at 435.
Butler, 137
Absent the violation of a statute, collective
bargaining agreement, or aspect of public policy, an employer
may discharge an at-will employee at any time for any reason.
Lowry v. Cabletron Sys., Inc., 973 F. Supp. 77, 83 (D.N.H. 1997)
(quoting Smith v. F.W. Morse & Co., 76 F.3d 413, 426 (1st Cir.
1996)).
The at-will status of an employment relationship can be
altered by contract.
For example, an employer’s promulgation of
an employee handbook or policy statement to its employee may
constitute a unilateral contract offer that the employee accepts
20
by continuing to work at his job.
Panto, 130 N.H. at 736-37.
Such a contract can create obligations that limit or qualify the
employer’s ability to discharge the employee.
See id.
Standard
principles of contract formation govern the creation of such
contracts, and objective standards will determine the existence
of a contract.
Panto, 130 N.H. at 735-36, 741-42; see also F.W.
Morse, 76 F.3d at 426 (1st Cir. 1996).
An employer who seeks to avoid creating an employment
contract can do so via a written disclaimer in the handbook or
policy that indicates that the document will not create
contractual obligations.
Panto, 130 N.H. at 742.
Under the
reasoning of the New Hampshire Supreme Court’s decision in
Butler v. Walker Power, however, the mere existence of a
disclaimer does not automatically prevent all of a document’s
individual terms and policies from becoming enforceable
features.
See 137 N.H. at 436.
For example, a general
disclaimer that applies only to the “contract of employment” may
prevent the creation of a durational employment relationship,
but the handbook or policy may still create binding contractual
obligations regarding the incidents of employment -- such as
compensation and fringe benefits –- to the extent that the
incidents themselves are not disclaimed.
21
Id. at 436-37.
2.
The Online Policy Manual and its Disclaimers
The disclaimers on the OLPM are sufficient to prevent the
creation of an employment contract between UNH3 and Balsamo based
on that online manual.
Both the menu-page disclaimer and the
disclaimer that appears on the top of each policy page state
clearly that the OLPM is not an employment contract.
Furthermore, the disclaimers are sufficiently particular to
avoid the issue in Butler, where a generic disclaimer kept the
employment relationship at-will but was not specific enough to
prevent the individual policies in the handbook from becoming
contractually binding as the incidents of an at-will employment
relationship.
See 137 N.H. at 436-437.
In this case, the menu-
page disclaimer specifically notes that the OLPM “cannot be
construed to establish rights beyond those provided for in the
official and current policies of USNH,” (OLPM Main Menu, Doc.
No. 16-6) and each policy page states that the “policies may be
amended at any time, [and] do not constitute an employment
contract” (e.g., Termination Section, Doc. No 14-12). Together,
the language of the disclaimers is sufficient to cover not only
3
From this point forward, I refer to UNH and USNH collectively
as “UNH,” as neither party distinguishes between the two
institutional defendants.
22
the durational aspect of the employment relationship,4 but also
the incidents of employment contained in the individual
policies.
Moreover, the fact that the disclaimer is included on
each policy described in the OLPM puts the reader on further
notice that none of the policies give rise to enforceable
contractual obligations.
Balsamo only briefly contests the effectiveness of the
disclaimers, asserting that their language is “at best ambiguous
and should be construed against Defendants.”
Summ. J. at 15, Doc. No. 16-1.
P.’s Opp’n to
I do not see ambiguity,5 and
4
Balsamo cursorily asserts that the disclaimers do not apply to
the policies, found in the Appointments and Employment
Relationships Section of the OLPM, that specifically implicate a
durational component to UNH’s status appointment hiring. See
Employment Section § 6.2.4.1, Doc. No. 16-5 (“A status
appointment is normally reserved for those with continued
employment expectations . . . .”); id. § 6.2.5 (“Appointments
are based on a Fiscal Year, which is 12 consecutive months . . .
or on an academic year of approximately nine months . . . .”).
Aside from failing to offer either precedent or argument in
support of his contention, Balsamo fails to acknowledge that one
of the very provisions to which he cites contains yet another
disclaimer, which states, “A status appointment . . . shall not
be construed to imply a commitment or a contractual obligation
to provide employment.” Id. § 6.2.4.1.
5
In my previous opinion, I stated that the language of the menupage disclaimer was ambiguous because it was not clear whether
it disclaimed the individual policies themselves or merely the
online compilation of the policies. Order at 10-11, Doc. No.
12. In light of the evidence in front of me at this stage -notably the disclaimer on each policy page and Balsamo’s failure
to present a source of policies separate from the OLPM -- that
ambiguity has been dispelled.
23
Balsamo fails to meaningfully develop his claim that the
disclaimers are ineffective or of insufficient breadth to cover
all the OLPM policies.
Balsamo focuses instead on arguments
that attempt to circumvent the effect of the disclaimers.
First, he argues that the OLPM is merely a compilation of
actual, official policies, and that even if the OLPM does not
give him rights as an employee, the official policies do bestow
such rights.
Second, he contends that contractual rights arose
from documents UNH provided to him that recite certain UNH
policies set forth in the OLPM but do not contain the
disclaimers that are present in the OLPM.
I address each
argument in turn.
(a)
Existence of Actual Policies Outside of OLPM
Balsamo’s first claim is premised on the notion that the
OLPM is a mere representation of actual policies that exist in
some other official document.
He then argues that the other
official document gives him enforceable contractual rights.
As
support for this idea, Balsamo draws attention to the OLPM menupage disclaimer, which states that the OLPM “cannot be construed
to establish rights beyond those provided for in the official
and current policies of USNH.”
(emphasis added).
OLPM Main Menu, Doc. No. 16-6
He also points to the Handbook, whose
24
disclaimer states, “While the handbook summarizes plans,
programs, and policies, the exact terms of the written documents
for these plans, programs, and policies take precedent [sic].”
Handbook at 2, Doc. No. 14-18.
Based on these references to
“official [] policies” and “written documents” that exist apart
from the Handbook and the OLPM, Balsamo reasons that even if the
OLPM, as a medium for compiling and disseminating the official
policies, does not create employment rights, his at-will
relationship has nonetheless been modified by the official
policies themselves, as they exist in some other official
document.6
Balsamo has failed, however, to produce any official policy
document other than the OLPM.
This is likely because, as the
Secretary and General Counsel of the University System explains,
the OLPM has been the only policy manual used by UNH since 1989,
6
In a similar vein, Balsamo argues that the official and actual
policies adopted by the UNH Board “have the force of law and are
bi[n]ding upon the parties.” P.’s Opp’n to Summ. J. at 14, Doc.
No. 16-1. He contends that because UNH is a creature of
statute, see N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 187-A:3, and because the
trustees of UNH have the statutory authority to promulgate
certain rules, see id. § 187–A:16, each of UNH’s policies,
irrespective of UNH’s means of dissemination or use of
disclaimers, must therefore be a legally binding government
rule. I disagree. UNH’s status as a public university does not
prevent it from hiring at-will employees. No case or statute
cited by Balsamo supports his contention that UNH is prevented
from formulating policies that do not give rise to contractual
obligations.
25
when the University began the practice of using an online manual
without any hardcopy version.
Rogers Aff. ¶ 4, Doc. No. 17-6.
Without any evidence supporting his argument, I cannot sustain
Balsamo’s claim.
See Meuser v. Fed. Express Corp., 564 F.3d
507, 515 (1st Cir. 2009) (“[T]he non-moving party must offer
definite, competent evidence to rebut the [summary judgment]
motion.”).
(b)
Hardcopy Reproductions without Disclaimers
Balsamo’s second argument is based on his receipt of
hardcopies of UNH policies without the OLPM disclaimers.
Shortly after Balsamo was hired, he received a copy of the
Discrimination Policy, and after he was discharged and filed his
grievance he received copies of UNH’s policies on Termination,
Discrimination, and the Family and Medical Leave Act.
In light
of the circumstances of their dissemination to Balsamo, these
documents were incapable of creating contractual obligations.
I first address the policy hardcopies that Vilmarie Sanchez
sent to Balsamo in response to his filing of the grievance.
These documents were provided to Balsamo after his employment
had been terminated.
Therefore, the consideration that is
typical in cases where an employer handbook or policy document
is construed as an offer to contract –- continued service by the
employee –- is not present.
See Panto, 130 N.H. at 736.
26
“Consideration is essential to all contracts,” Chasan v. Vill.
Dist. of Eastman, 128 N.H. 807, 816 (1986), and Balsamo has not
asserted an alternate theory of consideration.
Moreover, Balsamo received the copies of the policies in
response to his letter citing those policies.
Clearly, he was
already familiar with the policies from the OLPM, where they
were accompanied by disclaimers.
That UNH reproduced those
policies without disclaimers and sent them to Balsamo does not
indicate that UNH then intended to be bound by policies it had
previously declared in the OLPM to be nonbinding.
A person in
Balsamo’s position could not have reasonably understood UNH’s
sending of those copies, after he had been terminated and in
response to his grievance, to be an offer to contract.
See id.
at 815 (explaining how an offer must create a reasonable
expectation that contractual obligations will result).
I next turn to the hardcopy of the Discrimination Policy
that Balsamo received around the time his employment began.
The
dissemination of that policy also is incapable of supporting a
breach of contract claim.
Although the hardcopy of the policy
did not have the disclaimers present in the OLPM, just under its
title the document stated: “The section references in this
policy correspond to the [OLPM], which contains this
Discrimination and Discriminatory Harassment Policy as adopted
27
by [UNH].
address].”
9.
This policy may be found on-line at [OLPM website
Discriminatory Harassment Packet at 8, Doc. No. 14-
In addition to that note directing attention to the OLPM,
the Handbook given to Balsamo at the start of his employment
also directed employees to look to the OLPM for more specific
information about UNH policies.
Had Balsamo looked to the OLPM
as the policy copy and the Handbook instructed, he would have
seen the disclaimers indicating that the policies would neither
establish rights nor create an employment contract.
Furthermore, notwithstanding the procedures set out in the
Discrimination Policy, the Handbook, which Balsamo acknowledged
reading and understanding, explicitly stated that UNH “reserves
the right to . . . terminate a staff member immediately if, in
its sole judgment, the nature of the situation justifies
immediate termination.”
In sum, Balsamo knew, or should have known, of the
disclaimers on the OLPM; he knew, or should have known, that the
hardcopy of the policy he received was identical in substance to
the corresponding OLPM section; and he knew that UNH reserved
the right to immediately terminate his employment.
He could not
reasonably have interpreted receipt of a hardcopy of the
Discrimination Policy as a contractual offer that would vest him
28
with procedural rights in the event discrimination complaints
were lodged against him.
B.
See Panto, 130 N.H. at 74.
Procedural Due Process
“The test for a procedural due process violation requires
the plaintiff[] to show first, a deprivation of a protected
property interest, and second, a denial of due process.”
Perez-
Acevedo v. Rivero-Cubano, 520 F.3d 26, 30 (1st Cir. 2008).
To
have a protected property interest in a benefit, a person “must
have more than a unilateral expectation of it.”
Bd. of Regents
of State Coll. v. Roth, 408 U.S. 564, 577 (1972).
In the
employment context, an employee must have a “legitimate claim of
entitlement to continued employment.”
Perry v. Sindermann, 408
U.S. 593, 602 (1972).
Balsamo has not presented evidence of a legitimate claim to
continued employment other than by citing to the policies
discussed at length above.7
As I have explained, those policies
did not create contractual obligations and did not alter the
status of Balsamo’s at-will employment relationship.
As an at-
will employee, Balsamo could be fired at any time with or
without cause.
Lowry, 973 F. Supp. at 83.
7
Accordingly, Balsamo
Although Balsamo frames his argument in alternative formats,
the gist of each claim is that the policies set out in the OLPM
and reproduced elsewhere vested him with rights that an at-will
employee would not possess.
29
had no protected property interest in continued employment and
his procedural due process claim must therefore fail.8
Ayala-
Rodriguez v. Rullan, 511 F.3d 232, 238 (1st Cir. 2007) (at-will
employment contract does not create property interest protected
by the due process clause).
IV.
CONCLUSION
Defendants’ motion for summary judgment (Doc. No. 14) is
granted.9
The clerk is directed to enter judgment accordingly
and close the case.
SO ORDERED.
/s/Paul Barbadoro
Paul Barbadoro
United States District Judge
March 2, 2012
cc:
James E. Lafrance, Esq.
Jeremy David Eggleton, Esq.
Martha Van Oot, Esq.
8
Balsamo does not argue that he has a protected liberty
interest to a name clearing hearing. See, e.g., Burton v.
Littleton, 426 F.3d 9, 15 (1st Cir. 2005). Accordingly, I do
not consider whether he has a viable due process claim based on
the deprivation of a liberty interest.
9
In light of my disposition of this case, I deny as moot
defendants’ motion to strike three exhibits that were submitted
by Balsamo along with his objection (Doc. No. 19). I have
considered all of the materials offered by Balsamo, and the
outcome of this case is unaffected by the contested exhibits.
30
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?