Thompson v. Bridgeport Hospital, No. Cv980352686s (Oct. 22, 2001)

2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 14414
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedOctober 22, 2001
DocketNo. CV98 035 26 86 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 14414 (Thompson v. Bridgeport Hospital, No. Cv980352686s (Oct. 22, 2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Bridgeport Hospital, No. Cv980352686s (Oct. 22, 2001), 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 14414 (Colo. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION RE: MOTION TO STRIKE (DOCKET ENTRY NO. 124)
The plaintiff concedes she was terminated by the defendant as a Pulmonary Function Technician Assistant on December 1, 1997, when her department was closed. She instituted this action on or about April 21, 1998, and asserted in eleven counts therein various employment claims — i.e., several statutory violations, breach of express and implied contract, breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, promissory estoppel, negligent infliction of emotional distress, and negligent misrepresentation.

The history of the pleadings filed by the plaintiff thereafter is tortured. As to her Amended Complaint filed on April 26, 1999, Counts Five, Nine, Ten, and Eleven were struck by Nadeau, J. on June 22, 1999, and November 9, 1999. On June 18, 2001, Moran, J., in a lengthy decision, struck Counts One through Six and Nine through Eleven of the plaintiff's Second Amended Complaint. Ten days later, the plaintiff filed the Third Amended Complaint (the instant complaint) which, despite removal of Count Nine of the Second Amended Complaint (alleging the defendant's failure to provide her a copy of her personnel file) is pointedly similar to the allegations of the prior complaint.

The defendant has moved to strike Counts One through Six, Nine, and Ten of the Third Amended Complaint for those reasons it moved to strike the corresponding counts of the predecessor complaint, which counts were stricken by Moran, J. The defendant has asserted both in its memorandum of July 26, 2001, and its argument before this court on September 4, 2001, the absence of additional factual allegations which should suggest a result different than that reached by Moran, J. The plaintiff insists there are such new factual allegations and, thus, a different result should obtain.

A motion to strike tests the legal sufficiency of the allegations of a complaint to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.Peter-Michael, Inc. v. Sea Shell Associates, 244 Conn. 269, 270 (1998). In ruling upon such motion, the court is limited to the facts alleged in the complaint and must construe those facts most favorably to the plaintiff. Faulkner v. United Technologies Corp., 240 Conn. 576, 580 (1997). If the facts provable would support a cause of action, the motion to strike must be denied. What is necessarily implied need not be expressly alleged. Pamela B. v. Ment, 244 Conn. 296, 308 (1998). CT Page 14416

Count One alleges a breach of contract claim. The plaintiff asserts the defendant's personnel policy and procedure manual created an express contract which made her "not an at-will employee" (Paragraph 3) which required the defendant to provide her written notice of termination and adequate oral notice of termination, an unemployment notice on or around her termination, to pay her certain benefits upon termination, to offer her another position within the hospital and not revoke that offer once accepted by the plaintiff, to reinstate her to that second position once the accepted offer was revoked, to offer her yet a second position within the hospital, and to provide her with her personnel file (Paragraph 27). The defendant's failure to do such things, she asserts, constituted a breach of that express contract (Paragraph 28) and caused her damages.

A close examination of the assertions contained in Count One of the Second Amended Complaint and Count One of the Third Amended Complaint regarding the defendant's alleged breaches of contract establishes the very same claims are advanced in Paragraph 27 of both complaints, the single exception being that the instant complaint also asserts, in sub-section (k) of Paragraph 27, that the failure to provide her her personnel file also breached the claimed express contract. Count One of "the instant complaint, in response to Judge Moran's finding the plaintiff failed to allege she had anything other than an at-will employment (page 11 of the June 18, 2001, Memorandum of Decision), asserts she was not an "at-will" employee (Paragraph 3), an allegation not made in the Second Amended Complaint. This is, however, a mere conclusory allegation unsupported by any facts tending to establish the same. The plaintiff fails still to include any specific factual allegations concerning the formation and terms of the express contract she claims she had with the defendant.

The mere providing of a personnel policy and procedure manual to an employee does not convert an at-will employee to a contract employee nor is an employers's indication of an intent to provide future employment (as in the offer of another position here) binding as a contract. Gearyv. Wentworth Laboratories, Inc., 60 Conn. App. 622, 628 (2000). Nothing about the employer's offer of a clerical position (an offer revoked when the plaintiff failed to pass all portions of the written test applicable to that position) constituted an agreement definite and certain as to its terms and requirements so as to constitute a contract. See SuffieldDevelopment Associates Ltd. Partnership v. Society for Savings,243 Conn. 832, 843 (1998). There are no allegations which suggest other than an employment agreement terminable at the will of either party and, thus, no reason is presented to conclude other than as was concluded by Moran, J. — specifically, the plaintiff could be terminated for any reason so long as that reason was not violative of an important public CT Page 14417 policy. No such violation is alleged nor can it be applied to the hospital's closing of the plaintiff's department. The law of the case established in the prior court ruling continues to pertain and the purported new allegations contained in Paragraphs 3, 16, 21, and 26 do not give rise to an express contract since it is still the law of this state that an employment agreement of indefinite duration is an at-will employment arrangement. See Battista v. United Illuminating Co.,10 Conn. App. 486, 495 (1987). It is of no assistance to the plaintiff to assert she was provided the manual in question when nothing contained therein converts her employment of indefinite duration to a specific term or asserts that she can be terminated only for specified reasons.

Court Two of the Third Amended Complaint alleges the defendant breached an implied contract of employment created by the "[d]efendant's personnel policy, related documents and words, acts and conduct which set forth the terms and conditions of employment related to termination, notice of unemployment, severance pay, seniority rights, re-employment rights, vacation pay and benefits, testing and reinstatement and the plaintiff's provision of consideration for these benefits by becoming an employee and remaining an employee. . . ." (Paragraph 26) Precisely the same allegation is asserted in Paragraph 26 of the same count in the prior filed complaint. Indeed, the only difference between the two counts is, again, the insertion of the claim in sub-paragraph (k) of Paragraph 27 of the instant complaint that the defendant's failure to provide the plaintiff her personnel file constituted breach of an implied contract between the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 14414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-bridgeport-hospital-no-cv980352686s-oct-22-2001-connsuperct-2001.