DUNLANY FOODS, INC. v. Ayers

260 S.E.2d 196, 220 Va. 502, 1979 Va. LEXIS 290
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 21, 1979
DocketRecord 771492
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 260 S.E.2d 196 (DUNLANY FOODS, INC. v. Ayers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DUNLANY FOODS, INC. v. Ayers, 260 S.E.2d 196, 220 Va. 502, 1979 Va. LEXIS 290 (Va. 1979).

Opinions

HARRISON, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

C. M. Ayers and 120 other former employees of Dulany Foods, Inc., filed their motion for judgment against Dulany, collectively seeking severance benefits. Following a three-day trial, the lower court, sitting without a jury, entered in favor of the plaintiffs 107 separate judgments in varying amounts totaling $138,765.22. Dulany has appealed, alleging that its offer of severance pay was purely gratuitous and was not capable of being accepted so as to form, a binding contract; that the individual plaintiffs did not rely upon it in continuing in the employment of the defendant; and that assuming the court correctly awarded judgments for severance pay, the amounts awarded should have been limited to the number of years the plaintiffs were employed by the defendant and its affiliate corporations.

Dulany Foods, Inc., owned and operated a frozen food complex which included a sales office in Salisbury, Maryland, and frozen food plants in Bridgeville, Delaware, and Exmore, Virginia, as well as a farming operation at Exmpre. In early December 1974, its Board of Directors decided to close these operations. J. J. Whittington, Jr., Dulany’s Vice-President of Operations, testified that he informed the Bridgeville plant employees on December 3, 1974, that the plant [505]*505would close on December 31, 1974. Whittington stated that at the direction of C. D. MacCormack, President of Dulany, he also told the workmen that they would receive severance or termination pay. All but one of the Bridgeville employees who were actually terminated subsequently received the promised benefits.

On December 13, 1974, MacCormack, together with J. O. Tankersley, Chairman of the Board of Dulany, announced at a called meeting of the Exmore plant employees that the Exmore plant would close on February 28, 1975. Tankersley told the employees that his company wanted to keep them at work if possible and that “[i]f the plant can be kept into operation and keep you people at work, it could be for sale.”

Following the closing of the Bridgeville plant, the employees at Dulany’s Exmore plant learned of the severance benefits that were being given to the Bridgeville employees and began to inquire of Whittington as to their severance pay. Whittington testified that during this time he talked with MacCormack on numerous occasions about the severance payments to be made to the Exmore employees. After these discussions with his superior, Whittington prepared a memorandum for MacCormack, dated January 28, 1975, which represented Whittington’s inquiry about and understanding of the severance pay policy that had been established by Dulany. This memorandum was delivered on January 29, 1975, to MacCormack, who remarked to Calvin M. Parks, the company’s Secretary-Treasurer and Comptroller, “I can’t see how you can close by February 28th. You have got repacking and we will pay severance as they [the employees] leave.”1 Then, in his own handwriting, MacCormack added a final sentence. The memorandum reads as follows:

DULANY FOODS DIVISION UNITED FOODS, INC.
Date: January 28,1975
TO: C. D. MacCormack
FROM: J. J. Whittington /s/JJW
SUBJECT: Guide Lines for Termination Pay for Exmore Plant and Salisbury Sales Office Employees.
The following sets forth the guide lines as I understand them from our conversation:
[506]*5061. Termination pay is to be paid to salary and hourly workers who are on the payroll as of January 26, 1975.
2. People who are working as of January 26, 1975, but leave for another job prior to February 28, 1975, are eligible for termination pay.
3. Termination pay to be based as follows:
Up to five (5) years’ service receive one (1) months’ termination pay.
Five to ten (5-10) years’ service receive two (2) months’ termination pay.
Ten (10) years’ and over service receive three (3) month’s termination pay. All eligible are to be compensated for earned vacation pay which has not been used.
All termination pay should be due and payable as of February 28,1975.
People remaining on payroll after 2/28/75 as needed will receive termination benefits on actual termination.2
JJW:cm /s/ C. D. MacCormack, Jr.
copy: CMP 1/29/75
MF

Dulany operated its Exmore plant beyond February 28, 1975, reassigning many of the employees to the repacking operation. During this time negotiations were under way for a sale of the plant. The defendant closed the Exmore facility on or about March 31, 1975, and dismissed all employees who had not previously been terminated. On April 1, 1975, Exmore Foods, Inc., leased the plant and equipment and continued operation. On July 9, 1975, Exmore Foods, Inc., exercised its option to purchase the Exmore plant from defendant for $687,107.90.

The plaintiffs involved here were employees of Dulany and all have been denied their severance pay. Dulany’s position is that it exacted no promise or act on the part of the plaintiffs in exchange for the company’s declaration of its intention to award termination pay; that neither continued nor satisfactory service with the company was required; and that any employee of Dulany could have left at any time for another job and still have remained eligible for severance pay. In substance, Dulany argues that the representations made by its officials, and the written memorandum, were merely voluntary promises of a gratuity, revocable at will, from which Dulany received no benefit, and the plaintiffs suffered no detriment.

[507]*507In support of this position Dulany cites Restatement of Contracts, § 24, which provides: “An offer is a promise which is in its terms conditioned upon an act, forebearance or return promise being given in exchange for the promise or its performance.” See also Williston on Contracts § 25 (3rd ed. 1957). It distinguishes Hercules Powder Co. v. Brookfield, 189 Va. 531, 53 S.E.2d 804 (1949), upon the ground that “continuous service” was not required by Dulany as the consideration to be paid for eligibility for termination pay.

In Hercules the government’s contracting officer had approved a dismissal wage and salary plan for the employer, following a representation by the employer that approval of the plan would “help in the recruit [sic] of labor, is essential in holding employees on war work during this critical period, and will serve as a means of achieving an orderly plant shutdown.” 189 Va. at 536, 53 S.E.2d at 806. At the end of the war the plant was turned back to the Corps of Engineers. Hercules advised its employees that those who were transferred directly to the personnel of the Corps would receive no dismissal wages. When Brookfield, who was so transferred, was refused dismissal wages he instituted suit. This court, in deciding that Brook-field was entitled to recover, said:

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Bluebook (online)
260 S.E.2d 196, 220 Va. 502, 1979 Va. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunlany-foods-inc-v-ayers-va-1979.