Woodring v. Board of Grand Trustees

633 F. Supp. 583, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 26407
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedApril 23, 1986
DocketCiv. A. 85-646(R)
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 633 F. Supp. 583 (Woodring v. Board of Grand Trustees) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodring v. Board of Grand Trustees, 633 F. Supp. 583, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 26407 (W.D. Va. 1986).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

TURK, Chief Judge.

Plaintiff Paul B. Woodring seeks compensatory and punitive damages from the Board of Grand Trustees of the Benevolent & Protective Order of Elks (the “Board”), and from the following Trustees of the Elks, both individually and in their capacities as Trustees: Gerald L. Powell, Vern R. Huck, Ted Callicott, Bob J. Bybee, Al F. Humphrey, Peter T. Affatato, Lester C. Hess, Jr., and James W. Damon. Woodring has claimed that the defendants fraudulently induced him to enter an employment contract, breached his employment contract, and intentionally inflicted emotional distress upon him. The defendants have moved for summary judgment. For the reasons set forth below, the motion will be granted.

BACKGROUND

The facts of this somewhat unusual case are completely recorded and virtually undisputed. However, events leading to the incident in controversy began to unfold at the turn of the century. The Benevolent and Protective Order of the Elks (“Order”) is a nonprofit organization well known for its fraternal, charitable, and community endeavors. The Board is the body charged with the management of the Order’s affairs, including the Elks National Home (the “Home”).

The Home was founded in 1903 on the outskirts of Bedford, Virginia. As reflected in excerpts from the annually published “Proceedings of the Grand Lodge Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks” (hereinafter “Annual Proceedings”) and the “Grand Lodge Annual Reports,” the Home has served as “a home away from home” where senior members of the Order could retire to live and other members of the Order (as well as the public) might visit. As the Annual Proceedings further reflect, the successive Executive Directors of the Home over the years have all been married and, with the assistance of their wives, sought to create a truly “home like,” rather than institutional, atmosphere at the Home. Hence, by custom and practice, the Executive Director and his wife have functioned as a husband and wife team. The Order has taken justifiable pride in and have annually acknowledged the accomplishments of both in their keeping of the Home.

In May 1982, the Board began to make plans to hire an Assistant Executive Director for the Home in order to provide an orderly transition of responsibility in the Executive Director’s post. Doral E. Irvin, who had been Executive Director of the Home since January 1, 1965, would reach the age of seventy-two in August 1985, and it had been agreed that he would retire as Executive Director on September 1, 1985. At the July 17, 1982 meeting, the Board officially voted to advertise in various publications for the position of Assistant Executive Director.

Woodring was one of the persons who ultimately applied for the position. At that time he was employed as a Project Engineer in the Transportation Department at Pennsylvania State University at a salary of $18,500.00 per year. Woodring first learned of the opening for the Assistant Executive Director position when Powell, a member of the Board, mentioned the position to him during the Elks National Convention in July 1982. Powell was the founder of the Elks National “Hoop Shoot” program, and plaintiff at the time was serving as Assistant to the National Director of Hoop Shoot. In the course of working together, they had become close friends. Woodring had initially declined interest in the Assistant’s position, but Powell suggested that he visit the Home in September 1982. Following a September visit, plaintiff decided to apply.

At the time he applied, Woodring had been an Elk for some twenty-one years and *586 was aware of the custom and practice that existed at the Home that the Executive Director position involved a husband and wife team. In the resume that plaintiff submitted as a part of his application, he included a one-page dissertation concerning his wife’s prior involvement in various Elk’s programs. Woodring did so because he was told to “put something in there about his wife.” He readily acknowledged that with respect to all the other jobs for which he had previously applied, nobody had ever asked him to put down extensive information about his wife.

Woodring requested several people to write letters of reference for him in support of his application. Emile Brady, who was the Director of the Elks National Hoop Shoot program and also a close friend of plaintiff, was one of those who wrote a supporting letter of reference. In his letter, after favorably commenting upon Woodring, Brady concluded as follows:

He and his wife, Janice, radiate a warm and cordial atmosphere at all the social functions my wife and I have had the privilege to attend, both in Elkdom and his chosen profession at Penn State. Realizing full well the importance his wife must play in the capacity he is applying for, I can only say that to meet and know her will describe it all. She is charming, intelligent, warm and loyal. Her profession as a registered nurse has lent a great deal to their family and community.

In due course, Woodring was selected as a finalist for the position and was notified that both he and his wife were to visit the Home on Saturday, November 20th to be given a tour of the facility and be interviewed by Board members. Plaintiff recognizes that in prior job interviews, he had never had to bring his wife with him.

Prior to interviewing the finalists for the position, the Board prepared a written list of twenty-six questions to be asked each couple who were to be interviewed together. Twenty of these questions were directed at the husband and six at the wife. Question 26, which was asked of each wife, read as follows:

What do you think about your husband accepting this position which will require so much of your time and talents to assist him?

Throughout the interview process Woodring never specifically asked whether marriage was a job requirement, nor did defendants ever expressly tell him that. In plaintiff’s own words, there was no need for defendants to make such statement.

Following Woodring’s selection, then Board Chairman Traynor, Callicott, and Powell, along with Advisory Committee 1 member H. Foster Sears, again met with plaintiff to negotiate an employment agreement to be submitted to the Board for approval. There was considerable negotiation concerning salary since the Board was offering a starting salary of $20,000, and Woodring was unwilling to accept it. Ultimately, a compromise was reached wherein he accepted the starting salary of $20,000, and the Board members agreed to raise his salary $2,500 after the first six months and an additional $1,500 at the end of his first year of employment, which would bring his salary to $24,000 after one full year of employment.

Woodring asserts that, contemporaneously with the above contract negotiations, Powell told him in a conversation between the two of them that upon Irvin’s retirement as Executive Director of the Home on September 1, 1985, plaintiff would be made the new Executive Director. Plaintiff, himself, has no basis for believing that when Powell made this statement to him he did not genuinely believe what Powell was saying, and defendants’ own records further reflect that it was certainly anticipated that Woodring would become the new Executive Director upon Irvin’s retirement.

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Bluebook (online)
633 F. Supp. 583, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 26407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodring-v-board-of-grand-trustees-vawd-1986.