Kenneth Vercammen (732) 572-0500

2053 Woodbridge Ave. Edison, NJ 08817

Ken is a NJ trial attorney who has published 130 articles in national and New Jersey publications on litigation topics. He was awarded the NJ State Bar Municipal Court Practitioner of the Year. He lectures for the Bar and handles litigation matters. He is Past Chair of the ABA Tort & Insurance Committee, GP on Personal Injury and lectured at the ABA Annual Meeting attended by 10,000 attorneys and professionals.

New clients email us evenings and weekends go to www.njlaws.com/ContactKenV.htm

Friday, February 12, 2016

Civil Model Jury Charge 2.11 WRONGFUL DISCHARGE IN VIOLATION in NJ

Civil Model Jury Charge 2.11 WRONGFUL DISCHARGE IN VIOLATION in NJ


Civil Model Jury Charge 2.11 WRONGFUL DISCHARGE IN VIOLATION OF A CLEAR MANDATE OF PUBLIC POLICY1 Model Jury charge NJ
Plaintiff has alleged that he/she was wrongfully discharged from his/her position in violation of public policy. I charge you that the policy of ________________ is a clear mandate of public policy2; you must decide whether plaintiff was discharged:
[choose appropriate option below:]
(1) in violation of that policy; or
(2) for exercising rights protected by that policy; or
(3) for declining to perform an act or acts which require a violation of that policy;
[or] whether, as defendant states, plaintiff was not discharged for a reason related to that policy.
[choose appropriate corresponding option below:]
(1) In order to establish that plaintiff was discharged in violation of a public policy, you must find by a preponderance of the evidence that plaintiffs
1This charge is to be given only if a claim is asserted underPierce v. Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp., 84N.J. 58 (1980).
2Whether there is a clear mandate of public policy prohibiting the conduct is a question for the trial judge.Warthen v. Toms River Community Hospital, 199N.J. Super.18, 25 (App. Div. 1985).CHARGE 2.11Page 2 of 4
discharge violated the [state the public policy]. If plaintiff does not prove this, you need not consider whether plaintiffs discharge was wrongful. If plaintiff does prove that his/her discharge violated the [public policy], then you must consider whether3a determinative factor for his/her discharge was a violation of the [public policy], and not some other reason such as _______________________, which defendant has asserted.
3Erickson v. Marsh & McLennan, 117N.J.539, 560, 561 (1990). This seems tautological, but that is what the opinion says.
4Pierce v. Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp.,supra,at 72.
5Tartaglia v. UBS PaineWebber Inc., 197N.J. 81, 111 (2008).
(2 or 3) In order to establish that plaintiff was discharged for exercising rights under [public policy] or for declining to perform an act or acts which require a violation of the [public policy], you must find that plaintiff has proved by a preponderance of the evidence that he/she:
a. had a reasonable basis for believing defendant engaged in a violation of the [state the public policy];4and
b. brought the alleged violation of the [state the public policy] to the attention of an appropriate governmental outside authority or took other action reasonably calculated to prevent the objectionable conduct.5CHARGE 2.11Page 3 of 4
6Tartaglia v. UBS PaineWebber Inc.,supra,at 109.
7Tartaglia v. UBS PaineWebber Inc.,supra,at 112.
8Although the New Jersey Supreme Court and Appellate Division have held that plaintiffs bringing claims under theNew Jersey Law Against Discrimination(LAD),New Jersey Conscientious Employee Protection Act(CEPA), andNew Jersey Family Leave Act(FLA) need only prove that the unlawful motive was a determinative factor in the adverse employment decision rather than the sole motivating factor,see, e.g., Bergen Commercial Bank v. Sisler,157N.J.188, 207 (1999) (so holding with regard to LAD),Donofry v. Autotote Systems, Inc., 350N.J. Super.276, 293 (App. Div. 2001) (so holding with regard to CEPA), andDePalma v. Building Inspection Underwriters, 350N.J. Super.195, 214 (App. Div. 2002) (so holding with regard to FLA), no reported New Jersey state or federal court decisions appear to have addressed that issue with regard to New Jersey common-law wrongful discharge claims.
Plaintiff must prove that he/she sufficiently expressed his/her disagreement with defendants [state the conduct alleged to be in violation of public policy] to support the conclusion that his/her discharge violates the mandate of public policy and is unlawful. That is to say, a complaint to an outside agency or a direct complaint to senior corporate management will ordinarily be sufficient. On the other hand, a complaint to an immediate supervisor or passing remarks to co-workers generally will not.6
[charge the following in every case]
It is the plaintiffs obligation to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that his/her [describe the alleged adverse action in question, such as demotion, firing, etc.] violated a clear mandate of public policy.7, 8In this regard, I remind you that plaintiff was a so-called at will employee, that is he/she did not have aCHARGE 2.11Page 4 of 4
contract of employment. In New Jersey, such an employee can be discharged at the wish of the employer for any reason or for no reason. He/she could be discharged for a false cause, or for no cause at all, provided only that the reason the employer discharged the employee did not violate any clear mandate of public policy. A person fired unfairly, but not fired in violation of a specific public policy, does not have a cause of action for wrongful discharge in violation of public policy.

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