Sally Hall v. Rag-O-Rama, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 2, 2021
Docket20-6090
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sally Hall v. Rag-O-Rama, LLC (Sally Hall v. Rag-O-Rama, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sally Hall v. Rag-O-Rama, LLC, (6th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 21a0502n.06

Nos. 20-6059/6090

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Nov 02, 2021 ) SALLY HALL, DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) ) Plaintiff-Appellant/Cross-Appellee, ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR v. ) THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF ) KENTUCKY RAG-O-RAMA, LLC, ) ) Defendant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant. )

BEFORE: BOGGS, GRIFFIN, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.

MURPHY, Circuit Judge. This case shows that a contract’s bad grammar does not neces-

sarily render it ambiguous. Sally Hall sued her former employer, Rag-O-Rama, LLC, when it fired

her less than a year after promoting her to an area-manager position. A poorly drafted sentence in

the parties’ employment contract stated: Hall “is reminded of the non-competition clause guide-

lines, as well as, obligating associate managers and higher to one full year of employment on the

management team at Rag-O-Rama.” This sentence has an obvious grammar mistake. Hall says

that a reasonable person might understand it as requiring Rag-O-Rama to retain her for a year. In

context, however, the sentence plainly obligated managers like Hall to stay for the year. It did not

require Rag-O-Rama to do anything and so did not depart from Kentucky’s default rule allowing

the company to fire Hall at any time. Maybe so, Hall responds, but Rag-O-Rama also fraudulently

induced her to take this job with additional oral promises it did not keep. Yet Hall could not have Nos. 20-6059/6090, Hall v. Rag-O-Rama, LLC

reasonably relied on those oral promises because they conflicted with the parties’ written contract.

The district court thus correctly rejected Hall’s breach-of-contract and fraud claims. That said,

Hall’s position was not frivolous. So the district court did not abuse its discretion by declining to

award attorney’s fees to Rag-O-Rama. In short, we affirm that court across the board.

I

Rag-O-Rama buys used clothes from individual customers and resells them to other cus-

tomers. Hall first learned of this company from a childhood friend, Vance Whitener. In 1999,

Whitener convinced her to work for Rag-O-Rama. Hall claimed that she did “just about every-

thing” for the company, ranging from writing its training manuals, to designing its slogans, to

managing its St. Louis and Columbus stores. Hall Dep., R.52, PageID 301, 305. Yet she “walked

away” from Rag-O-Rama in 2003 because Whitener had made her “position extremely uncom-

fortable.” Id., PageID 303.

Following her job with Rag-O-Rama, Hall eventually became the director of operations for

Elizabeth Cole Jewelry, a company that makes and sells jewelry. She started working for Elizabeth

Cole from her San Francisco home and kept working for it after she moved to her present home in

Kentucky.

Throughout this time, Whitener remained at Rag-O-Rama. He ultimately became its pres-

ident and sole owner. In 2015, Hall claims that Whitener pleaded with her to return to Rag-O-

Rama because of his health problems and the business’s lagging fortunes. (Whitener alleges that

Hall begged him for the job, but we must accept Hall’s version of the facts at this stage. See Bisig

v. Time Warner Cable, Inc., 940 F.3d 205, 210 (6th Cir. 2019).) Hall and Whitener agreed that

she would become a part-time trainer who would help the staff at Rag-O-Rama’s Columbus store

2 Nos. 20-6059/6090, Hall v. Rag-O-Rama, LLC

beginning on August 21, 2015. Rag-O-Rama agreed to pay Hall an $18,000 annual salary. She

could continue to live in Kentucky and keep her other job with Elizabeth Cole.

After a few months, Hall asserts, Whitener was “extremely pleased” with her work and

tried to convince her to take a full-time job. Resp., R.64-1, PageID 759–60. To persuade Hall to

quit Elizabeth Cole, Whitener allegedly offered several enticing terms. He suggested that Hall

could have a company car, $5,000 for her prior creation of the company’s slogan (“Recycle Your

Wardrobe”), and an opportunity to oversee a franchising division that could lead to Hall becoming

a part-owner. (Whitener denies promising these things.)

Swayed by Whitener’s promises, Hall left Elizabeth Cole and accepted a full-time job as

an area manager at Rag-O-Rama. Her new role, which came with a large pay increase to $51,000,

began on June 13, 2016. Because she took a risk by leaving a long-term job, Hall claims that she

insisted on an employment contract with Rag-O-Rama that would guarantee one year’s salary and

benefits. Hall and Whitener ultimately signed a document entitled “Communication Form” that

listed her job title and employment terms. A noncompete paragraph suggested that Hall was “ob-

ligating” herself “to one full year of employment on the management team at Rag-O-Rama” and

agreeing not to join a competitor for two years after her employment ended. Commc’n Form,

R.52-1, PageID 487. Another paragraph explained that Hall had reviewed the Employee Hand-

book and agreed to “uphold” its policies. Id. This handbook clarified that Rag-O-Rama hired all

individuals as “at will” employees whom it could fire at any time. The Communication Form did

not expressly include any of Whitener’s alleged oral promises to Hall.

When Rag-O-Rama hired Hall, it identified a list of problems for her to address at the

Columbus store, which had been missing its sales targets. Within months of Hall’s transition to

area manager, Whitener reviewed her performance. He noted some positive developments, but

3 Nos. 20-6059/6090, Hall v. Rag-O-Rama, LLC

also identified several areas of concern. Among other things, he suggested that Hall seemed to

have kept to her part-time schedule, that employees had trouble reaching her because her phone

regularly cut out, that she had difficulties running the store remotely from Kentucky, and that the

store’s sales continued to lag.

These problems persisted. On January 10, 2017, Whitener sent Hall a personal improve-

ment plan and final warning. He identified similar issues with Hall’s performance, including the

difficulties reaching her and her apparent inability to run the store remotely. Hall refused to sign

the document, claiming that Whitener was lying about her performance to set the stage for her

firing. The same day, Rag-O-Rama disabled Hall’s company email and cell phone and fired her.

Hall brought this diversity suit against Rag-O-Rama. The district court interpreted her

complaint to plead many claims, including breach of contract and fraud. In an exhaustive opinion,

the court examined and dismissed all but Hall’s fraud claims. Hall v. Rag-O-Rama, LLC, 2020

WL 2134121, at *6–23 (E.D. Ky. May 5, 2020). When reviewing her breach-of-contract claim,

the court found that the Communication Form constituted a contract. Id. at *6–7. Yet it also held

that Rag-O-Rama’s termination of Hall did not breach this contract because she remained an at-

will employee. Id. at *8–10.

Turning to Hall’s fraud claims, the court recognized that she alleged that Rag-O-Rama had

induced her to quit her prior job based on several unmet oral promises, including job security, a

company car, $5,000 for the prior design work, and a potential ownership interest. Id. at *16. The

court found that Hall could not have reasonably relied on any job-security promise because she

signed a contract making her an at-will employee. Id. at *18. It then found a dispute of fact on

the other promises. Id. at *19.

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