Tadsen v. Praegitzer Industries, Inc.

902 P.2d 586, 136 Or. App. 247, 1995 Ore. App. LEXIS 1209
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 6, 1995
Docket93-1208-L-2; CA A85428
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 902 P.2d 586 (Tadsen v. Praegitzer Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tadsen v. Praegitzer Industries, Inc., 902 P.2d 586, 136 Or. App. 247, 1995 Ore. App. LEXIS 1209 (Or. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

DEITS, P. J.

Defendant employer appeals from the judgment for plaintiff, its former employee, in this action under ORS 659.121 for a wrongful discharge based on plaintiffs physical impairment resulting from an on-the-job injury. Plaintiff also alleged other related unlawful employment practices. We affirm.

Plaintiff began working for defendant as an electrician in 1989. He was promoted to a supervisory position the following year. In 1991, plaintiff suffered an on-the-job back injury and took a two-week medical leave of absence. In his absence, defendant filled plaintiffs supervisory position, and it assigned him to perform as a nonsupervisory electrician upon his return. However, it did not formally change his job classification at that time.

Plaintiff suffered aggravations of his injury while performing his new assignment, which necessitated further medical leaves between May and October 1991. In late October, defendant formally removed him from his supervisory position, and assigned him to be a “senior electrician,” which entailed more physically strenuous work than the supervisory job. According to defendant, plaintiff “felt his back injury prevented him from performing the duties of senior electrician.” Plaintiff took sick leave and, in early November, defendant fired him. Plaintiff was in his early 50’s at that time.

Plaintiff then brought this action, alleging the discriminatory firing decision and other unlawful employment practices. He sought economic and noneconomic damages of various kinds, including damages for loss of future earnings and benefits. Such damages, generally referred to as “front pay” damages, are designed to compensate a wrongfully discharged employee for the wages and benefits that he would ultimately have received from his employer if the employer had not wrongfully discharged him.

The case was tried to a jury, which found that defendant had wrongfully discharged plaintiff because of his physical impairment and also, earlier, had failed to reinstate him to his own or another suitable position on his return to work. See ORS 659.415 and ORS 659.425 (proscribing the conduct [250]*250that the jury found). The jury awarded damages in the total amount of $423,450. Although the verdict form called for a general award of damages, the form as returned by the jury contained handwritten interlineations, indicating that the jury had included two components in its overall award: “$70,000 non-economic (stress)” and “$353,450 economic.” The latter figure accorded exactly with the amount of earnings and benefits that plaintiffs expert testified that he would have received had he remained defendant’s employee until reaching the age of 63.1 Axiomatically, an award of that amount under that and the other evidence necessarily would have consisted largely of front pay damages.

For reasons we will discuss, our disposition of defendant’s last assignment of error depends on whether we may consider only the general award for which the verdict form asked, or may also consider the component figures shown by the interlineations: if we are restricted to the former approach, the assignment may succeed, but if we may follow the latter approach, it fails.2

Generally, we could not properly take the jury’s interlineations into account when, as here, the record does not definitively disclose the source or the circumstances under which they were made. However, in its opening brief, defendant cites the verdict form and recites as fact:

“The jury awarded plaintiff economic damages in the amount of $353,450 (the exact future estimated by [plaintiffs expert] to be plaintiffs lost past and future wages and benefits to retirement age 63) and non-economic damages in the amount of $70,000, for a total award of $423,450.”

Accordingly, the differentiated figures are accepted and presented to us as the facts of the case by defendant,3 the appealing party and the one that stands to lose by our viewing the facts in that manner. Quite apart from the verdict form itself, we may accept as true any representation of adverse facts that a party to an appeal presents to us. We do so here, in [251]*251the interest of avoiding a reversal that is not warranted under the facts that the parties agree on and inform us to be true.

All of defendant’s arguments on appeal relate to the claim for front pay damages. In its first assignment of error, defendant asserts that the trial court erred by denying its motion to strike the claim for those damages. Defendant argues initially that plaintiff was an “at will” employee and that, as such, he should not be entitled to damages for front pay as a matter of law. Defendant reasons that plaintiff “had no right to future employment” with defendant. Because defendant could discharge plaintiff at any time on any basis that would not constitute an unlawful reason, defendant maintains that plaintiff “cannot say that ‘but for’ the wrongful termination he would continue to be employed by [defendant].” Defendant hypothesizes that, had the trial court ordered plaintiffs reinstatement as a remedy in this case, defendant “could have terminated [plaintiff] the day after his reinstatement so long as the discharge” — unlike the one that actually occurred — “did not constitute an unlawful employment practice.” Defendant concludes, on the basis of those propositions, that front pay damages can never be “compensatory” in the case of an at-will employee, and therefore cannot be recoverable under ORS 659.121.4

We rejected a materially identical argument by the employer in Wooton v. Viking Distributing Co., Inc., 136 Or App 56, 899 P2d 1219 (1995). The thrust of defendant’s argument is that, notwithstanding a discriminatory discharge and its actual causal relationship to a loss of future earnings, damages for that loss cannot be recovered because, independently of the unlawful firing, the employee had no “right” to or assurance of any future employment with the employer. The premise that necessarily underlies that argument is that an employer should enjoy a conclusive presumption that, had it not discharged the employee illegally, it would have discharged him lawfully at exactly the same time that it in fact did so unlawfully. We find that premise unconvincing and, accordingly, are not persuaded by the argument.

[252]*252Defendant also argues, in support of its first assignment:

“When the terms of employment are indefinite, as in an at-will employment situation, neither the existence nor the amount of future wages can be proved with reasonable certainty. It follows, as a matter of law, that an at-will employee cannot recover future wages.”

To the extent that that argument presents the same per se argument as the first, except that it is cast in terms of “proof,” we reject it for the reasons we rejected a similar argument by the employer in Wooton. 136 Or App at 65-66. We decline to hold that an at-will employee can never prove the requisite facts for an award of front pay damages.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
902 P.2d 586, 136 Or. App. 247, 1995 Ore. App. LEXIS 1209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tadsen-v-praegitzer-industries-inc-orctapp-1995.