Worpenberg v. the Kroger Co., Unpublished Decision (3-8-2002)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 8, 2002
DocketAppeal No. C-010381, Trial No. A-9902838.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Worpenberg v. the Kroger Co., Unpublished Decision (3-8-2002) (Worpenberg v. the Kroger Co., Unpublished Decision (3-8-2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Worpenberg v. the Kroger Co., Unpublished Decision (3-8-2002), (Ohio Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION.
The plaintiff-appellant, Pamela Worpenberg, appeals from the order of the trial court granting summary judgment to the defendants-appellees, The Kroger Company and three of its employees, in an action arising out of Worpenberg's resignation from the company. Worpenberg, a front-end manager, resigned during a meeting in which the company was investigating accounting errors ("misrings") made by her, and in which she felt that she was being unjustly accused of theft. Worpenberg's action included claims of intentional infliction of emotional distress, invasion of privacy, and what she referred to as "publicity torts" and "negligent damage to reputation."

In her single assignment of error, Worpenberg asserts that summary judgment on her claim of intentional infliction of emotional distress was improper because the conduct of Kroger and its employees was sufficiently extreme and outrageous to support such a claim. She also contends that the trial court erred by determining that her claims for "publicity torts, "negligent damage to reputation," and invasion of privacy were barred by the applicable statute of limitations. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I.
On September 2, 1997, Worpenberg was called into the manager's office of the Kroger grocery store in Mason, Ohio, where she worked as a front-end manager in the video department. She was met there by Judy Oeters, a trainer for the store, and Charles Greenert, a member of the company's Risk Management Department. She was advised of inaccuracy in her records due to an unusual number of misrings. The company was concerned with the number of misrings and with a particular misring involving the sum of $200. Worpenberg testified on deposition that although she was told by Oeters that she was not being accused of theft, the tenor of the remarks directed at her were overtly accusatory. For example, she testified that Greenert said to her, "We're not accusing you of theft. We just want to know where the $200 is. * * * Come on Pam. Tell me where the $200 is."

Worpenberg became indignant. According to Worpenberg, she reviewed the records herself and determined that there was, in fact, an overage, not a shortage. Worpenberg accepted responsibility for the misrings. She testified, however, that when she asked whether the till had balanced, she was refused an answer even though, she alleged, both Oeters and Greenert knew that there was no money missing. She testified that, despite their being an overage, not a shortage, Greenert continued to insinuate that she had behaved dishonestly, telling her at one point, "We're watching you with the cameras, Pam. We've got you on film."

At the end of the meeting, Worpenberg was asked to prepare a written statement and was then advised that she was being suspended pending further investigation. Worpenberg's response was dramatic. She testified that she said, "No, I quit. I don't need this f'ing [sic] job. I can get a job anywhere." She testified that she then told Greenert that she expected an apology after an investigation exonerated her. Greenert told her that if she quit there would be no further investigation.

Worpenberg then left the meeting and went outside the manager's office to her desk, where she began collecting pictures of her children to take home. Two of her co-workers, one of whom was Nancy Rhoades-Meiller, her immediate supervisor, watched her. Worpenberg testified that she said to Rhoades-Meiller, "Is this what you think of me, Nancy? You think I would take money? Is that what you fucking think? I take money? You think I would take money?" To a third co-worker, Brent Cox, who tried to calm her down, she testified that she said, "What would you do in this situation, Brent? You would do the same thing. This is terrible. They accused me of theft."

Worpenberg testified that she then collected her purse and left the store. The next day she had a meeting in the office of Glenn DuBrucq, the zone manager responsible for the Mason store. Oeters was also at the meeting. Worpenberg complained to DuBrucq that no one would tell her how the till had balanced. DuBrucq instructed Oeters to tell her. Oeters said that the till showed an overage of $105. Worpenberg testified that she then explained to DuBrucq that the misrings had not caused any shortage. She stated that DuBrucq expressed surprise and then anger at Oeters, saying, "What the hell is this, Judy?" The meeting concluded with DuBrucq promising to investigate the matter further and to call Worpenberg.

Less than a week later, Worpenberg was called back to speak with DuBrucq. According to Worpenberg, DuBrucq told her at their meeting, "Pam, I investigated you. The company has investigated you. You did nothing wrong." DuBrucq also advised her, however, that she was wrong to have cursed at Oeters and Greenert, and that certain people wanted to see her demoted to assistant front-end manager because of her behavior during that interview. Worpenberg was unapologetic and refused to accept a demotion. She asked for a letter of recommendation. DuBrucq replied that he would "[a]bsolutely" give her one.

As soon as Worpenberg got home from the meeting, she received a telephone call from John Schroeder of Human Resources. She testified that Schroeder told her, "Pam, Mr. DuBrucq is devastated. He won't take away your title. He won't take away your money. And in three months you can get in the [management training] program, at Christmas time, when it comes through. It's a promise of his." Worpenberg responded that she would consider the offer.

In the days that followed, Worpenberg spoke to a friend of hers, a worker at Kroger's Tylersville store, who advised her strongly that she should come back to work to publicly demonstrate her innocence. Worpenberg then called DuBrucq and told him that she would return. She testified that DuBrucq told her, "I don't think you will ever realize how happy this makes me." Worpenberg stated, however, that she told DuBrucq that she only wanted to work at the Tylersville store. DuBrucq responded that she was badly needed at the Forest Park store. Worpenberg testified that she felt that she was being reassigned to "a punishment store" and balked. Worpenberg ultimately decided not to take the position. When asked why, she testified,

I felt, when I thought about it in depth, that going back I would not move ahead in my career as I had. I felt this was a black mark on me. I knew how they talked about theft in the store and how people were made fun of. And I knew that it was already all over all the stores and I didn't see any career there anymore.

II.
In her first assignment of error, Worpenberg argues that the record in the trial court created a triable issue of whether Kroger's conduct toward her was sufficiently egregious to establish a claim of intentional infliction of emotional distress. She identifies two aspects of Kroger's behavior as being actionable: (1) that Oeters and Greenert accused her of theft when, she alleges, both knew that no money was missing; and (2) that the company failed to take appropriate steps to allay and quash rumors among its employees that she had been caught stealing.

In Yeager v. Local Union 20 (1983), 6 Ohio St.3d 369, 453 N.E.2d 666, the Ohio Supreme Court recognized the tort of intentional infliction of emotional distress as embodied in 1 Restatement of the Law 2d, Torts (1965) 71, Section 46(1).

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Bluebook (online)
Worpenberg v. the Kroger Co., Unpublished Decision (3-8-2002), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worpenberg-v-the-kroger-co-unpublished-decision-3-8-2002-ohioctapp-2002.