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McFarland v. Virginia Retirement
Services of Chesterfield, L.L.C.
United States District Court,E.D.
Virginia,
Richmond Division.
Penny McFARLAND, Plaintiff,
v.
VIRGINIA RETIREMENT SERVICES OF
CHESTERFIELD, L.L.C. d/b/a Magnolias of
Chesterfield, et al., Defendants.
Civil Action No. 3:06CV651.
March 6, 2007.
Background: Terminated employee brought
action against employer and certain
owners and directors, alleging
violations of Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA)
as well as state law claims of wrongful
discharge. Defendants moved to dismiss.
Holdings: The District Court, Dennis W.
Dohnal, United States Magistrate Judge,
held that:
(1) employee stated claim for wrongful
discharge in violation of public policy;
(2) employee failed to state a claim
under state whistleblower statute; and
(3) employee failed to state a claim
against members, managers, or agents of
employer who did not personally
participate in her alleged wrongful
discharge.
Motion granted in part and denied in
part.
West Headnotes
[1] Federal Courts 170B 421
170B Federal Courts
170BVI State Laws as Rules of Decision
170BVI(C) Application to Particular
Matters
170Bk421 k. Labor and Employment;
Workers' Compensation. Most Cited Cases
The court would apply Virginia law to
employee's pendent state law claims
against employer and others alleging
wrongful termination and retaliation.
[2] Federal Courts 170B 409.1
170B Federal Courts
170BVI State Laws as Rules of Decision
170BVI(C) Application to Particular
Matters
170Bk409 Conflict of Laws
170Bk409.1 k. In General. Most Cited
Cases
When deciding state law claims under
supplemental jurisdiction, federal
courts apply the choice-of-law rules of
the jurisdiction in which they sit.
[3] Labor and Employment 231H 759
231H Labor and Employment
231HVIII Adverse Employment Action
231HVIII(A) In General
231Hk759 k. Public Policy Considerations
in General. Most Cited Cases
Under Virginia law, an employee can
bring a Bowman claim against an employer
based on an employer's violation of
public policy in the discharge of an
employee: (1) where an employer violated
a policy enabling the exercise of an
employee's statutorily created right;
(2) where the public policy violated by
the employer was explicitly expressed in
the statute and the employee was clearly
a member of that class of persons
directly entitled to the protection
enunciated by the public policy; or (3)
where the discharge was based on the
employee's refusal to engage in a
criminal act.
[4] Labor and Employment 231H 759
231H Labor and Employment
231HVIII Adverse Employment Action
231HVIII(A) In General
231Hk759 k. Public Policy Considerations
in General. Most Cited Cases
Under Virginia law, an employee
plaintiff attempting to assert a
wrongful discharge claim in violation of
public policy must identify a Virginia
statute establishing a public policy
that was violated by the employer.
[5] Labor and Employment 231H 759
231H Labor and Employment
231HVIII Adverse Employment Action
231HVIII(A) In General
231Hk759 k. Public Policy Considerations
in General. Most Cited Cases
Under Virginia law, courts construe
narrowly an employee's claim against an
employer based on the employer's
violation of public policy in the
discharge of an employee, because
termination of an employee in violation
of the policy underlying any one statute
does not automatically give rise to a
common law cause of action for wrongful
discharge.
[6] Asylums and Assisted Living
Facilities 43 17
43 Asylums and Assisted Living
Facilities
43k17 k. Officers and Employees. Most
Cited Cases
Under Virginia law, employee of assisted
living facility stated claim for
wrongful discharge in violation of
public policy when she alleged she was
fired for truthfully reporting her
suspicions of abuse of aged adults in
response to an inquiry by a state
investigator, where employee was a
mandated reporter of such activity.
West's V.C.A. §§ 63.2-1606(A)(5, 6),
63.2-1606(B), 63.2-1606(F).
[7] Asylums and Assisted Living
Facilities 43 17
43 Asylums and Assisted Living
Facilities
43k17 k. Officers and Employees. Most
Cited Cases
Under Virginia law, allegations of
employee of assisted living facility,
that she was fired for truthfully
reporting her suspicions of abuse of
aged adults in response to an inquiry by
a state investigator, stated claim for
wrongful discharge in violation of
public policy explicitly expressed in
state statutes prohibiting retaliation
or discrimination against a person who,
in good faith, provided information to
an agency having responsibility for
protecting the rights of facility's
residents. West's V.C.A. §§ 63.2-1730,
63.2-1731.
[8] Labor and Employment 231H 759
231H Labor and Employment
231HVIII Adverse Employment Action
231HVIII(A) In General
231Hk759 k. Public Policy Considerations
in General. Most Cited Cases
Under Virginia law, laws that do not
expressly state a public policy, but
were enacted to protect the property
rights, personal freedoms, health,
safety, or welfare of the general
public, may support a wrongful discharge
claim if they further an underlying,
established public policy that is
violated by the discharge from
employment.
[9] Asylums and Assisted Living
Facilities 43 17
43 Asylums and Assisted Living
Facilities
43k17 k. Officers and Employees. Most
Cited Cases
Under Virginia law, employee of assisted
living facility failed to allege that
she was asked or required by her
employer not to report any suspicion of
abuse, neglect, or exploitation of
adults, as would state a claim for
wrongful discharge in violation of
public policy based on refusal to engage
in criminal act of making false report
of adult abuse, neglect, or
exploitation. West's V.C.A. §
63.2-1606(G).
[10] Asylums and Assisted Living
Facilities 43 17
43 Asylums and Assisted Living
Facilities
43k17 k. Officers and Employees. Most
Cited Cases
Labor and Employment 231H 800
231H Labor and Employment
231HVIII Adverse Employment Action
231HVIII(A) In General
231Hk799 Health and Safety
231Hk800 k. In General. Most Cited Cases
Virginia's whistleblower statute
prohibiting discharge of an employee who
had has filed a safety or health
complaint covered only complaints
regarding the safety and health of
employees, and did not cover complaints
regarding the health and safety of an
employer's customers. West's V.C.A. §
40.1-51.2:1.
[11] Limited Liability Companies 241E 27
241E Limited Liability Companies
241Ek24 Rights and Liabilities of
Members or Stockholders
241Ek27 k. Liability for Corporate Debts
and Acts. Most Cited Cases
Limited Liability Companies 241E 43
241E Limited Liability Companies
241Ek40 Officers and Agents
241Ek43 k. Individual Liabilities of
Officers and Agents. Most Cited Cases
Employee failed to state a claim under
Virginia law against members, managers,
or agents of limited liability company
(LLC) for wrongful discharge, absent
allegations that these individuals
personally participated in or otherwise
directed the alleged wrongful
termination. West's V.C.A. § 13.1-1019.
[12] Asylums and Assisted Living
Facilities 43 17
43 Asylums and Assisted Living
Facilities
43k17 k. Officers and Employees. Most
Cited Cases
Labor and Employment 231H 857
231H Labor and Employment
231HVIII Adverse Employment Action
231HVIII(B) Actions
231Hk857 k. Persons Protected, Persons
Liable, and Parties; Standing. Most
Cited Cases
Under Virginia law, employee's
allegations that executive director of
limited liability company (LLC) that
employed her personally participated in
or contributed to her wrongful
termination stated a claim against the
executive director for wrongful
discharge. West's V.C.A. § 13.1-1019.
[13] Limited Liability Companies 241E 6
241E Limited Liability Companies
241Ek6 k. Nature and Purpose of Entity
in General. Most Cited Cases
Limited Liability Companies 241E 27
241E Limited Liability Companies
241Ek24 Rights and Liabilities of
Members or Stockholders
241Ek27 k. Liability for Corporate Debts
and Acts. Most Cited Cases
Under Virginia law, a limited liability
company (LLC) is an independent entity
which can sue and be sued, and its
members are not personally liable for
the debt or actions of the company.
West's V.C.A. § 13.1-1000 et seq.
[14] Corporations 101 306
101 Corporations
101X Officers and Agents
101X(B) Authority and Functions
101k306 k. Individual Liability on
Corporate Contracts, and for
Unauthorized or Illegal Acts. Most Cited
Cases
Under Virginia law, an officer or
director of a corporation is liable only
for those intentional torts he or she
commits or authorizes on behalf of the
corporation.
*729 Robert Scott Oswald, Gregory Robert
Sharma-Holt, Nicholas Wyckoff Woodfield,
The Employment Law Group PC, Washington,
DC, for Plaintiff.
Neil Shantaram Talegaonkar, Christopher
M. Malone, Thompson & McMullan,
Richmond, VA, for Defendants.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
DENNIS W. DOHNAL, United States
Magistrate Judge.
This matter is before the Court by
consent of the parties pursuant to 28
U.S.C. § 636(c)(1) on the Defendants'
Partial Motion to Dismiss pursuant to
Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure for failure to state a
claim upon which relief can be granted
(docket entry no. 14). The Plaintiff,
Penny McFarland, brings suit pursuant
to, inter alia, the Fair Labor Standards
Act ("FLSA" or the "Act"), 29 U.S.C. §
201et seq., alleging that the
Defendants, Virginia Retirement Services
of Chesterfield, L.L.C. ("Magnolia"),FN1
and some of its various owners and
directors,FN2*730 failed and/or refused
to pay McFarland certain regular and
overtime wages due her under the Act. (Am.Compl.¶¶
1, 3) (docket entry no. 2.) McFarland
also brings two pendent state law
claims: the first alleges wrongful
discharge in violation of Virginia
public policy (the "Bowman claim"); the
second is for wrongful
retaliation/discharge pursuant to
Va.Code Ann. § 40.1-51.2:2. (Am.Compl.¶¶
43-52). The matter has been extensively
briefed and the Court has entertained
oral argument. For the reasons set forth
herein, the Defendants' Partial Motion
to Dismiss is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED
IN PART.
FN1. Virginia Retirement Systems of
Chesterfield, L.L.C. does business as
Magnolias of Chesterfield. As such, the
primary Defendant will be referred to as
"Magnolia."
FN2. The individually named Defendants
include Mary Dunmoyer (the Executive
Director of Magnolia), Robert Dunmoyer
(the Administrator of Magnolia), and
David H. Matthews ("Matthews"), Ben
Stalker Reed ("Reed"), and Frances Wood
Loughlin ("Loughlin"), the latter three
Defendants alleged to be owners of
Magnolia. (Am.Compl.¶¶ 1, 9-14.) The
parties have stipulated to the
dismissal, without prejudice, of the
claims against Defendant Matthews
(docket entry no. 35), as well as
Defendant Loughlin (docket entry no.
37). The portions of the Defendants'
Motion to Dismiss addressing the
viability of McFarland's claims against
Matthews and Loughlin are therefore
rendered moot.
Material Facts
Because this case arises from a motion
to dismiss, the facts as alleged in the
Amended Complaint must be taken as true
and viewed in the light most favorable
to Plaintiff, Penny McFarland
("McFarland" or the "Plaintiff"). Chao
v. Rivendell Woods, Inc., 415 F.3d 342,
346 (4th Cir.2005). Magnolia is a
Virginia, for-profit retirement
community, and it employed McFarland as
its Activities Director and Office
Manager from May 2005 until the date of
her termination on July 1, 2006. (Am.Compl.¶¶
17, 18.) In these roles, McFarland was
responsible for coordinating and
conducting activities for the residents
of Magnolia, and was paid $15 per hour
for such efforts. (Am.Compl.¶ 18.)
McFarland's FLSA claim is based on
Magnolia's alleged "hours shaving" and
failure to compensate her for time
worked "off-the-clock." See29 U.S.C. §
207(a). McFarland asserts that her
duties as the Activities Director
required her to spend many hours "off
the clock," that the Defendants were
aware or should have been aware that
McFarland was performing such work, that
the Defendants accepted the benefits
derived therefrom, and yet failed to
compensate McFarland for her "regular
and overtime hourly wages." (Am.Compl.¶¶
19, 37.) The specific instances of
overtime work performed is not relevant
to the Court's analysis of the pending
Motion to Dismiss, but suffice it to say
that McFarland claims she was not paid
for any of these additional services. (Am.Compl.¶¶
20-27.)
McFarland brings her second cause of
action for wrongful termination in
violation of Virginia public policy. She
alleges that she was terminated for
participating in a state investigation
of a safety complaint levied against
Magnolia. (Am.Compl.¶ 30.) The facts
supporting the wrongful termination
charge are pled as follows:
On or around June 22, 2006, [Effie]
Stovall FN3 instructed the staff to take
the residents outside for a walk. It was
around 95 degrees outside. Someone made
a complaint out of concern for the
residents. An inspector from the [state]
licensing board called Magnolia and
spoke to [McFarland] about the
complaint. [McFarland] felt she had to
comply with the investigation and
answered the investigator's questions
truthfully. [McFarland] immediately
informed Stovall of the phone call.
FN3. Stovall was McFarland's supervisor
and was responsible for payroll hours
and reporting. (Am.Compl.¶ 28.) She is
not a named defendant in the present
case.
On or around June 29, 2006, after a
telephone call with the inspector,
[Defendant] Mary Dunmoyer told Stovall
to terminate [McFarland]. Mary Dunmoyer
stated that because the walk was an
"activity," [McFarland] should be
terminated, even though Stovall informed
Mary Dunmoyer that it was indeed Stovall
who had given the instruction for the
walk. Mary Dunmoyer stated that *731 by
speaking to the inspector, [McFarland]
was trying to "sabotage" Magnolia and
should be terminated immediately.
Initially, Stovall refused to terminate
[McFarland], but complied after Mary
Dunmoyer threatened to terminate her [
(Stovall) ] as well.
[McFarland] was terminated on July 1,
2006 and filed for unemployment
compensation.
(Am.Compl.¶¶ 31-33.) In essence,
McFarland alleges that she was
terminated because she provided
information regarding the health and
safety of Magnolia's residents in
response to the State investigator's
inquiry. Such action, McFarland
contends, violates Virginia's strong
public policy favoring the liberal
reporting of suspicion of abuse,
neglect, or exploitation of aged adults,
seeVa.Code Ann. § 63.2-1606, and, more
specifically, the State's public policy
prohibiting the retaliation against an
employee of an assisted living facility
who provides information to, or
otherwise cooperates with, the
appropriate State authorities regarding
residents at such facilities, see id.§
63.2-1730.
After the Virginia Employment Commission
determined that McFarland qualified for
unemployment benefits (Am.Compl.¶ 33),
McFarland filed a safety and health
complaint with the Virginia Department
of Labor and Industry on August 28,
2006. SeeVa.Code Ann. § 40.1-51.2:2(A)
(an employee who has been discharged for
filing a safety or health complaint may
file a complaint with Commissioner
within 60 days of the alleged
violation). Nonetheless, the
Commissioner refused to issue a charge
against the Defendants. Hence, McFarland
brings her third cause of action under
Va.Code Ann. § 40.1-51.2:2(B) (if the
Commissioner refuses to issue a charge
against the allegedly
discriminating/discharging employer, the
employee may bring an action in state
court for appropriate relief), which she
believes vests her "with a right to
report safety and health violations, and
to bring an action for appropriate
relief should her employer discharge her
or otherwise discriminate against her
for exercising a right under the
Labor/Employment/Safety code." (Am.Compl.¶
51.)
The Defendants have moved for partial
dismissal of McFarland's lawsuit
pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure, arguing that
Count II (wrongful discharge in
violation of public policy) and Count
III (retaliation/discrimination for
filing a safety or health complaint) of
the Amended Complaint fail to set forth
sufficient factual allegations upon
which relief can be granted. (Defs.'
Partial Mot. Dismiss) (docket entry no.
14.)
Standard of Review
Pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), a complaint
must be dismissed when a plaintiff's
allegations fail to state a claim upon
which relief can be granted. Fed.R.Civ.P.
12(b)(6). After accepting the facts as
alleged in the Amended Complaint as true
and viewing them in the light most
favorable to Plaintiff McFarland, see
Chao, 415 F.3d at 346, this Court should
not grant the Defendants' Rule 12(b)(6)
motion "unless ... it appears certain
that [McFarland] cannot prove any set of
facts in support of [her] claim
entitling [her] to relief." Id.
(citation omitted). Stated differently,
a "court may dismiss a complaint only if
it is clear that no relief could be
granted under any set of facts that
could be proved consistent with the
allegations." Swierkiewicz v. Sorema N.A.,
534 U.S. 506, 514, 122 S.Ct. 992, 152
L.Ed.2d 1 (2002).
Analysis
1. Virginia Law Applies to McFarland's
Pendent State Claims
[1][2] When a pendent state law claim is
presented to a federal court in
conjunction with a federal question
claim, a federal*732 court has
supplemental jurisdiction to hear the
pendent state law claim if it "form[s]
part of the same case or controversy" as
the federal claim. See28 U.S.C. §
1367(a). Here, McFarland's state claims
plainly arise from the same "case or
controversy" as her federal FSLA claim,
for both the FSLA claim and the state
claims arise from the same set of facts,
and it would be unreasonable to require
that McFarland pursue her claims in two
separate judicial proceedings. See White
v. County of Newberry, 985 F.2d 168, 171
(4th Cir.1993) (district court may
exercise supplemental jurisdiction over
claims that "the plaintiff would
ordinarily be expected to try ... in one
judicial proceeding."). When deciding
state law claims under supplemental
jurisdiction, federal courts apply the
choice-of-law rules of the jurisdiction
in which they sit. Klaxon Co. v. Stentor
Elec. Mfg. Co., 313 U.S. 487, 496-97, 61
S.Ct. 1020, 85 L.Ed. 1477 (1941). This
Court sits in Virginia, and since
Virginia applies the doctrine of lex
loci delicti to tort claims, "the law of
the place of the wrong governs all
matters related to the basis of the
right of action." Dreher v. Budget
Rent-A-Car Sys., Inc., 272 Va. 390, 634
S.E.2d 324, 327 (2006) (citations
omitted). Hence, Virginia law will
govern the resolution of McFarland's
state law claims.
2. McFarland Has Pleaded a Valid Bowman
Claim
Count II of the Amended Complaint
alleges that McFarland was wrongfully
discharged in violation of public
policy. Essentially, McFarland alleges
that she was fired because she answered
a state investigator's questions
truthfully regarding the "activity" of
taking some of Magnolia's residents on
an outside excursion in 95 degree
weather. See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 31-33.
Specifically, McFarland claims that
Defendant Mary Dunmoyer, the Executive
Director of Magnolia, told McFarland's
supervisor that "by speaking to the
[State] inspector, [McFarland] was
trying to ‘sabotage' Magnolia and should
be terminated immediately." (Am.Compl.¶
32.)
Since there is no contract establishing
that Magnolia hired McFarland for a
definite period or pursuant to specific
terms, the Court must presume that
McFarland was an at-will employee,
meaning that Magnolia could terminate
her for any reason upon reasonable
notice. See County of Giles v. Wines,
262 Va. 68, 546 S.E.2d 721, 723 (2001)
(citations omitted). However, Virginia
recognizes an exception to the doctrine
of employment at-will "based on an
employer's violation of public policy in
the discharge of an employee." Rowan v.
Tractor Supply Co., 263 Va. 209, 559
S.E.2d 709, 710 (2002) (citing the
seminal Virginia case establishing the
exception, Bowman v. State Bank of
Keysville, 229 Va. 534, 331 S.E.2d 797
(1985)). A lawsuit brought under this
exception is known as a "Bowman claim."
[3] The narrow exception recognized in
Bowman is limited "to discharges which
violate public policy, that is, the
policy underlying existing laws designed
to protect the property rights, personal
freedoms, health, safety, or welfare of
the people in general." Miller v. SEVAMP,
Inc., 234 Va. 462, 362 S.E.2d 915, 918
(1987) (emphasis in original). The
Supreme Court of Virginia has recognized
at least three circumstances where a
Bowman claim can be maintained: (1)
where an employer violated a policy
enabling the exercise of an employee's
statutorily created right; (2) where the
public policy violated by the employer
was explicitly expressed in the statute
(e.g.,"It is the public policy of the
Commonwealth of Virginia that ..."), and
the employee was clearly a member of
that class of persons directly entitled
to the protection enunciated by the
public policy; or (3) *733 where the
discharge was based on the employee's
refusal to engage in a criminal act. See
Rowan, 559 S.E.2d at 711 (internal
citations omitted). McFarland claims
that the facts as pled in the Amended
Complaint satisfy each of the three
exceptions as noted.
[4][5] As an initial matter, an employee
plaintiff attempting to assert a
wrongful discharge claim in violation of
public policy must "identify [a]
Virginia statute establishing a public
policy" that was violated by the
employer. Lawrence Chrysler Plymouth
Corp. v. Brooks, 251 Va. 94, 465 S.E.2d
806, 809 (1996). "While virtually every
statute expresses a public policy of
some sort, [the Supreme Court of
Virginia] continue[s] to consider" the
Bowman exception to be "narrow" because
"termination of an employee in violation
of the policy underlying any one statute
does not automatically give rise to a
common law cause of action for wrongful
discharge." Rowan, 559 S.E.2d at 711
(internal brackets omitted) (quoting
City of Virginia Beach v. Harris, 259
Va. 220, 523 S.E.2d 239, 245 (2000)).
I. Did Magnolia Violate a Policy
Enabling the Exercise of McFarland's
Statutorily Created Right?
[6] In Bowman, several employees were
fired because they refused to vote
shares of stock in the manner directed
by their employer. Former Va.Code §
13.1-32 (currently codified in Code §
13.1-662) gave shareholders the right to
vote their shares. Obviously, to fully
realize the public policy underlying the
shareholders' statutory right,
shareholders had to be allowed to vote
such shares free from duress or
intimidation. Thus, the Supreme Court of
Virginia concluded that "[b]ecause the
right conferred by statute is in
furtherance of established public
policy, the employer may not lawfully
use the threat of discharge of an
at-will employee as a device to control
the otherwise unfettered discretion of a
shareholder to vote freely his or her
stock in the corporation." 331 S.E.2d at
801. Similarly, it would violate
Virginia public policy for an assisted
living facility employer to terminate an
employee who reports truthful
information regarding the health and
safety of residents at the employer's
facility, especially when the employee
is statutorily obligated to report
suspected abuse of such residents,
because the statutory rights conferred
on these employees furthers the
well-established public policy endorsing
the protection, care, and well-being of
Virginia's aged adults.
Virginia law requires certain
professionals to report instances of
abuse, neglect or exploitation of aged
or incapacitated adults:
A. Matters giving reason to suspect the
abuse, neglect or exploitation of adults
shall be reported immediately upon the
reporting person's determination that
there is such reason to suspect....
Reports shall be made to the local
department or the adult protective
services hotline in accordance with the
requirements of this section by the
following persons acting in their
professional capacity:
5. Any person employed by ... a public
or private ... facility and working with
adults in an administrative, supportive
or direct care capacity; [and]
6. Any person providing full,
intermittent or occasional care to an
adult for compensation, including but
not limited to, companion, chore,
homemaker, and personal care workers.
....
Va.Code Ann. § 63.2-1606(A)(5) and (6).
Importantly, "[a]ll persons required to
report suspected adult abuse, neglect or
exploitation shall cooperate with the
investigating*734 adult protective
services worker of a local department
and shall make information, records and
reports which are relevant to the
investigation available to such worker
to the extent permitted by state and
federal law." Id. § 63.2-1606(B)
(emphasis added). And, "[a]n employer of
a mandated reporter shall not prohibit a
mandated reporter from reporting
directly to the local department...."Id.
§ 63.2-1606(F).
It is clear that McFarland is a
"mandated reporter" under the facts
alleged in the Amended Complaint because
she worked at "a private facility and
work[ed] with adults in an
administrative, supportive or direct
care capacity," and/or because she
provided "intermittent or occasional
care to an adult for compensation." Id.
§ 63.2-1606(A)(5), (6). McFarland
alleges that the contact from the State
Board led her to suspect abuse of aged
adults, and, therefore, Virginia law
required her to truthfully report these
suspicions to the Board and to cooperate
in any subsequent investigation. (Am.Compl.¶¶
31-33.) Indeed, Virginia law does
require professionals like McFarland to
report such activity, and the public
policy of Virginia encourages everyday
citizens to report the same if they be
so advised. The Amended Complaint
alleges that the Defendants terminated
McFarland for reporting and providing
information to the investigator, an act
that, under Virginia law, McFarland was
required to perform. SeeVa.Code Ann. §
63.2-1606(B). Thus, McFarland concludes
that the Defendants' actions violated
the public policy supporting McFarland's
right (or more precisely, her
obligation) as a mandated reporter to
provide information regarding the
incidents of abuse of aged adults to the
State Board. As such, in firing
McFarland, Magnolia attempted to punish
her for exercising a statutorily created
right and, more importantly, it
disregarded Virginia's public policy
supporting the reporting of abused
persons to the appropriate state agency.
The Defendants argue that McFarland's
claim does not satisfy the first Rowan
scenario because "McFarland has not
alleged that she was ever prohibited
from reporting any matters that she
believed to be the abuse, neglect, or
exploitation of adults." (Defs.' Mem.
Supp. Partial Mot. Dismiss at 4)
(emphasis added) (docket entry no. 15.)
McFarland, on the other hand, asserts
that she is not required to allege that
the Defendants prohibited her from
fulfilling her statutorily created
rights, but rather only that the
Defendants' actions violated the policy
underlying her statutorily created
rights. (Pl.'s Mem. Opp'n at 9) (docket
entry no. 21.)
The Defendants misconstrue the
requirements for pleading a cause of
action under the first Rowan exception
to the at-will employment doctrine.
Although the shareholders in Bowman were
prevented from voting their shares as
they wished, the Supreme Court of
Virginia has never held that to satisfy
the first Bowman exception, an employee
must show that he was, in fact,
prohibited from exercising a statutory
right. To the contrary, the Rowan Court
noted that the employee must prove that
the employer violated a policy enabling
the exercise of an employee's
statutorily created right, Rowan, 559
S.E.2d at 711, not that the employer
must actually prevent the employee from
exercising the statutorily created
right.
Here, McFarland alleges that the
Defendants violated Virginia's public
policy mandating the reporting of
suspected abuse or neglect of elderly
residents at an assisted living facility
by those having responsibility for the
care of those residents. In response to
an inquiry about suspected abuse or
neglect by a state investigator,
McFarland reported what she knew of the
incident, and now alleges that she was
*735 fired for doing so. "All persons
required to report suspected adult
abuse, neglect or exploitation," as was
the case with McFarland, "shall
cooperate with the investigating adult
protective services worker of a local
department and shall make information,
records and reports which are relevant
to the investigation available to such
worker to the extent permitted by state
and federal law." Va.Code Ann. §
63.2-1606(B) (emphasis added). And,
"[a]n employer of a mandated reporter
shall not prohibit a mandated reporter
from reporting directly to the local
department." Id. § 63.2-1606(F). If an
at-will employee of an assisted living
facility could be terminated for
responding to and providing information
to a state agency regarding the
suspected abuse or neglect of aged
adults, the statutes cited herein would
be rendered meaningless. The rights and
protections conferred on employees such
as McFarland are precisely designed to
further Virginia's public policy seeking
to ensure the health and well-being of
the State's aged populace. Indeed, if
persons such as McFarland feared losing
their jobs for providing truthful
information regarding the health and
safety of these individuals, fewer
incidents of abuse and neglect would be
reported, and the public policy
endorsing the same ultimately defeated.
Thus, McFarland's Amended Complaint
satisfies the first Rowan exception to
the employment at-will doctrine. See
Bleich v. Florence Crittenton Servs. of
Baltimore, Inc., 98 Md.App. 123, 632
A.2d 463, 471 (1993) (plaintiff stated
cause of action for wrongful discharge
in violation of public policy when she
alleged she was fired for sending a
letter that she suspected child abuse
and neglect where such reporting was
required by Maryland law); Hirsovescu v.
Shangri-La Corp., 113 Or.App. 145, 831
P.2d 73, 75 (1992) (plaintiff who
asserted he was discharged because he
made "good faith" reports of "potential
physical abuse" to patients in a
residential care center set forth a
cause of action for wrongful discharge);
Witt v. Forest Hosp., Inc., 115
Ill.App.3d 481, 71 Ill.Dec. 123, 450
N.E.2d 811, 813 (1983) (nurse who
alleged she was fired for providing
information to State guardianship and
advocacy commission stated cause of
action for wrongful discharge).
II. Did Magnolia Violate a Public Policy
Explicitly Expressed in a Statute and
was McFarland Clearly a Member of that
Class of Persons Directly Entitled to
the Protection Enunciated by that Public
Policy?
[7][8] To satisfy the second Rowan
exception to the at-will employment
doctrine, McFarland must allege that
Magnolia violated a public policy
explicitly expressed in a Virginia
statute, and that McFarland was clearly
a member of that class of persons
directly entitled to the protection
enunciated by that public policy. See
Rowan, 559 S.E.2d at 711. With regard to
the particular statute a plaintiff
claims to "explicitly" express a public
policy (i.e.,"It is the policy of the
Commonwealth that ..."), the Supreme
Court of Virginia has held that the
statute itself need not be so explicit
to justify a wrongful termination claim
in every case. "Laws that do not
expressly state a public policy, but
were enacted to protect the property
rights, personal freedoms, health,
safety, or welfare of the general
public, may support a wrongful discharge
claim if they further an underlying,
established public policy that is
violated by the discharge from
employment." Mitchem v. Counts, 259 Va.
179, 523 S.E.2d 246, 251 (2000)
(citations omitted). That said, the
Virginia Code makes it a violation to
retaliate against any person who engages
in certain protected conduct:
No assisted living facility ... may
retaliate or discriminate in any manner
against any person who (i) in good faith
*736 complains or provides information
to, or otherwise cooperates with, the
Department or any other agency of
government... having responsibility for
protecting the rights of residents of
assisted living facilities ... [or] (ii)
attempts to assert any right protected
by state or federal law....
Va.Code Ann. § 63.2-1730 (emphasis
added). Additionally,
No assisted living facility ... may
retaliate in any manner against any
person who in good faith reports adult
... abuse or neglect pursuant to ...
Article 2 (§ 63.2-1603 et seq.) of
Chapter 16 of this title.
[9] Id.§ 63.2-1731. McFarland's Amended
Complaint satisfies the second Rowan
exception to the employment at-will
doctrine. The statutes are designed to
protect persons in McFarland's position
who "blow their whistle" on an assisted
living facility, and she falls into the
class of individuals covered by the
statutes' provisions. In fact, Sections
63.2-1730 and 1731, as well as the
provisions contained in Section
63.2-1606, discussed supra, are all
designed to afford protection to
employees like McFarland who are
employed at assisted living facilities,
who report suspected abuse or provide
information to the State Board regarding
such abuse, but yet are fired as a
result (i.e., retaliated against) by the
facility for performing their required
duties. These statutes, taken as a
whole, convey the Commonwealth's public
policy favoring the protection of aged
adults and the persons who are
responsible for their well-being and
comfort. Therefore, as pled, the
Defendants' retaliatory termination of
McFarland violated Virginia's public
policy prohibiting the retaliation or
discrimination against a person who, in
good faith, provides information to an
agency having responsibility for
protecting the rights of residents of
assisted living facilities. McFarland
was clearly a member of that class of
persons directly entitled to the
protection articulated by the statute
and, thus, McFarland's Bowman claim
survives under the second recognized
exception to the at-will employment
doctrine.FN4
FN4. At the same time, the Amended
Complaint fails to satisfy the third
Rowan exception-that McFarland was
discharged based on her refusal to
engage in a criminal act. Rowan, 559
S.E.2d at 711. Va.Code Ann. §
63.2-1606(G) imposes criminal liability
on those persons 14 years of age or
older who make or cause to be made a
report of adult abuse, neglect, or
exploitation that he knows to be false.
Id. § 63.2-1606(G) (emphasis added). As
the Defendants emphasize, "Nothing in
the Complaint suggests that McFarland
was asked or required not to report any
suspicion of abuse, neglect, or
exploitation of adults or that her
termination was based on McFarland's
refusal to engage in a criminal act." (Defs.'
Mem. at 6) (emphasis added). Indeed, it
is not alleged that anyone on behalf of
Magnolia told McFarland to lie to the
State investigator, and it is not
alleged that anyone told McFarland she
could not or should not report the
suspected abuse, or that she should
refuse to respond to the State
investigator's inquiries. Therefore, as
McFarland makes no claim that she was
asked to break the law, she cannot
satisfy the third Rowan exception. See
Mitchem, 523 S.E.2d at 252 (trial court
did not err in dismissing plaintiff
employee's claim that she was wrongfully
discharged in violation of the public
policy embodied in the statute
establishing the crime of simple assault
as a Class 1 misdemeanor because the
employee "did not allege that her
employer discharged her for refusing to
commit this crime.").
3. Retaliation/Discrimination Under
Va.Code Ann. § 40.1-51.2:1
[10] In Count III, McFarland argues that
Va.Code Ann. § 40.1-51.2:1 vests her
"with a right to report safety and
health violations, and to bring an
action for appropriate relief should her
employer discharge her or otherwise
discriminate against her for exercising
a right under *737 the
Labor/Employment/Safety code." (Am.Compl.¶
51.) According to McFarland, the
"Defendants required their staff to
perform walks in weather of 95 degrees,
and are prohibited for [sic ]
terminating [McFarland] for speaking
with the state licensing board about
this incident. Defendants' obligation to
provide its employees with a safe
workplace environment pursuant
to"Section 40.1-51.2:1"should also be
extended to Defendants' customers, the
residents." (Id.) (emphasis added). As
noted below, such a construction
stretches the statute beyond its
permissible reach.
Section 40.1-51.2:1, commonly known as
Virginia's whistleblower statute,
provides:
No person shall discharge or in any way
discriminate against an employee because
the employee has filed a safety or
health complaint ... or otherwise acted
to exercise rights under the safety and
health provisions of this title for
themselves or others.
Va.Code Ann. § 40.1-51.2:1.
McFarland's claim under this Section is
once again predicated on her discussion
with the inspector from the state
licensing board. In her view, she
"engaged in conduct that exercised her
rights under the safety and health
provisions, as she spoke to [the
Department] regarding the unsafe
conditions endured by Defendants'
elderly residents." (Pl.'s Mem. Opp'n at
13.) By doing so, she contends that she
"acted to exercise rights under the
safety and health provision of this
title for ... others." Va.Code Ann. §
40.1-51.2:1. But the Defendants argue
that McFarland's cooperation with the
licensing inspector is not a proper
basis for seeking the protection of
Section 40.1-51.2:1. (Defs.' Mem. at 6.)
This is so, they contend, because Title
40. 1, Chapter 3, Article 5 of the Code
governs safety provisions as they relate
to the protection of employees. (Id. at
7.) They maintain that the General
Assembly intended the statute to apply
to situations in which employees alone
are in danger of unsafe work hazards,
i.e., OSHA violations and the like.
(Id.) Thus, any complaint McFarland may
have had regarding the care of residents
was entirely independent of the safety
of her workplace. (Id. at 8.)
The Court cannot reasonably hold that
Section 40.1-51.2:1 was intended to
address the situation McFarland alleges
to have taken place, and the Court
concludes that the statute's application
should not be extended in such a way.
Indeed, Article 5 outlines various
provisions relating to the duties of
employers, see Section 40.1-51.1(A)
(requiring employers to furnish
employees with a safe place of
employment free from recognized hazards
likely to cause death or serious
physical harm to its employees ), as
well as the rights and duties of
employees, see Section 40.1-51.2. And,
most importantly, the General Assembly
explicitly established that Title 40.1
is "intended to provide solely for
safety, health, and welfare of employees
and the benefits thereof shall not run
to any other person ...."Va.Code Ann. §
40.1-3 (emphasis added). Thus, Section
40.1-51.2:1 is designed to ensure the
safety and health of employees and no
one else. To read the statute otherwise
would create a general whistleblower
protection for reporting virtually
anything that happens to any individual
in the workplace. Thus, McFarland's
claim pursuant to Section 40.1-51.2:1
must be dismissed with prejudice.
4. Are the Defendants Proper Parties to
McFarland's State Claim for Wrongful
Discharge in Violation of Public Policy?
[11][12] Finally, the individual
Defendants contend that no individual
liability may be imposed against them
with regard to McFarland's common law
wrongful discharge claim because they
were never McFarland's employer; rather
Magnolia was the employer. (Defs.' Mem.
at 11.)
*738 [13] The Virginia Limited Liability
Company Act, Va.Code Ann. § 13.1-1000et
seq., addresses the issue. Defendant
Virginia Retirement Services of
Chesterfield, L.L.C. operates as
Magnolias of Chesterfield and, as a
Virginia limited liability company
("LLC"), it is "an independent entity
which can sue and be sued and its
members are not personally liable for
the debt or actions of the company."
Hagan v. Adams Prop. Assocs., Inc., 253
Va. 217, 482 S.E.2d 805, 807 (1997); see
also Gowin v. Granite Depot, L.L.C., 272
Va. 246, 634 S.E.2d 714, 719 (2006) ("A
limited liability company is an entity
that, like a corporation, shields its
members from personal liability based on
actions of the entity.") (citations
omitted). Indeed, "no member, manager,
organizer or other agent of a limited
liability company shall have any
personal obligation for any liabilities
of a limited liability company, whether
such liabilities arise in contract, tort
or otherwise, solely by reason of being
a member, manager, organizer or agent of
a limited liability company."Id.§
13.1-1019 (emphasis added). Furthermore,
"[a] member of a limited liability
company is not a proper party to a
proceeding ... against a limited
liability company, except where,"inter
alia,"(i) the object is to enforce a
member's ... liability to the limited
liability company...."Id. §
13.1-1020.FN5 Since Defendant Magnolia
is a limited liability company, its
members, managers, and agents can have
no "personal obligation for any
liabilities of" Magnolia "solely " by
virtue of their positions as members,
managers, or agents of the LLC, even
when such liability arises from a tort.
Id.§ 13.1-1019.
FN5. A "member" is "a person that has
been admitted to membership in a[LLC]
... and that has not ceased to be a
member,"Va.Code Ann. § 13.1-1002, and a
"manager" is "a person ... designated by
the members of a[LLC] to manage the
[LLC] as provided in the articles of
organization or an operating
agreement,"id. Construing the facts
alleged in the Amended Complaint in the
light most favorable to McFarland, see
Chao, 415 F.3d at 346, those individual
Defendants asserted to be owners of
Magnolia (i.e., Matthews, Reed, and
Loughlin) will be considered "members"
of the LLC, while the remaining
individual Defendants (i.e., Mary
Dunmoyer and Robert Dunmoyer) will be
treated as "managers" or "agents" of the
LLC for purposes of analyzing their
statuses as proper parties to Counts II
and III of the Amended Complaint.
It is clear from the face of the Amended
Complaint that the only member, manager,
or agent of Magnolia alleged to have
personally participated in or
contributed to McFarland's alleged
wrongful termination is Mary Dunmoyer,
the Executive Director of Magnolia. (Am.Compl.¶¶
31-32.) With the exception of Ms.
Dunmoyer, the Amended Complaint does not
allege that any of the remaining
individual Defendants personally
participated in or otherwise directed
Magnolia's tortious conduct. Indeed, the
only specific reference to the
individual Defendants is their status as
owners and/or managers of Magnolia. (Am.Compl.¶¶
1, 9-14.) Since a plaintiff's action for
wrongful discharge sounds in tort, the
individually named Defendants (with the
exception of Ms. Dunmoyer), whose
existence in this case is predicated
solely on their status as members,
managers, or agents of Magnolia, must be
dismissed as parties to McFarland's
common law wrongful discharge claim.FN6
See Wash. County v. City of Bristol, 63
Va. Cir. 450, 454 (Va. Cir. Ct.2003)
(citing *739Section 13.1- 1019 and
holding that plaintiff's allegation that
defendant member was principal owner of
a Virginia LLC was insufficient to state
a claim for holding that member
individually liable).FN7
FN6. The Court contemplated requiring
the individual Defendants to remain as
parties pending anticipated discovery
and a possible motion for final
dispositive relief by summary judgment
because certain factual allegations are
pled against the Defendants in the
plural. For example, the Amended
Complaint states that McFarland "was
terminated on July 1, 2006 and filed for
unemployment compensation. Defendants
testified that [McFarland] was
discharged for giving inaccurate
information to the Director of Licensing
and for providing information that did
not concern [McFarland] or her job...."
(Am.Compl.¶ 33) (emphasis added.)
However, such after-the-fact
allegations, at best, do not pertain to
the relevant actions undertaken to
initially terminate McFarland as there
are regarding the Defendant Mary
Dunmoyer, and the Court is otherwise
obliged to render the appropriate relief
of dismissal when sufficient grounds
arise so as to excuse a party from
further expense and effort. At the same
time, it is also appropriate to allow
McFarland to conduct focused discovery
on the issue of potential individual
liability of additional parties and for
leave to be granted to rejoin any party
if the appropriate basis for such a
claim can be fairly alleged consistent
with the strictures of Fed.R.Civ.P.
11(b). Although McFarland's counsel
informally requested leave to amend at
this juncture during a recent telephone
conference with all counsel, the Court
presumes that a sufficient basis is
lacking at present to plead such
additional allegations in good faith as
required. Accordingly, the motion to
dismiss said parties will be without
prejudice to allow such forthcoming
amendment if a sufficient basis should
develop.
FN7. While Va.Code Ann. § 13.1-1020
allows a member of a LLC to be a proper
party to a suit only when the object of
the suit is (i) to enforce a member's
right against or liability to the LLC or
(ii) in the context of a derivative suit
similar that provided for in Code §
13.1-1042, such limited exceptions
appear inconsistent with Section 1019 as
well as the relevant case law allowing
for the imposition of liability on a
member who personally engages in
tortious conduct. Indeed, it would be
illogical to hold, on one hand, that a
member may be liable for his or her own
tortious conduct inflicted on a
plaintiff, yet to also hold, on the
other hand, that this same member would
not be a proper party defendant in a
lawsuit filed by the same injured
plaintiff. Even so, Section 1020 is
specifically limited to a member's party
status in lawsuits involving LLC's, and
therefore it does not alter the Court's
determination as to whether managers or
agents of a LLC-such as Ms. Dunmoyer may
be proper party defendants in a wrongful
discharge lawsuit.
[14] Such a conclusion furthers the
statutory intent behind the Virginia
Limited Liability Company Act which
explicitly pronounces that a LLC is an
independent entity designed to generally
shield its members and managers from
personal liability. SeeVa.Code Ann. §
13.1-1019. The conclusion also gives
appropriate deference to those decisions
from the Supreme Court of Virginia
permitting a common law wrongful
discharge claim to proceed against those
officers or agents of a company who have
played a key role in contributing to the
company's tortious conduct allegedly
inflicted on a wrongfully discharged
plaintiff. See, e.g., Bowman, 331 S.E.2d
at 798-801 (permitting employees'
wrongful discharge lawsuit to proceed
against both a Bank and seven individual
members of the Bank's nine-person Board
of Directors directly implicated in
firing the employees, holding that the
employees had "stated a cause of action
in tort against the Bank and the named
directors for improper discharge from
employment.") (emphasis added); Lockhart
v. Commonwealth Educ. Sys. Corp., 247
Va. 98, 439 S.E.2d 328 (1994)
(employee's wrongful discharge claim
allowed to proceed against both
corporate entity and individual
supervisor who made decision to
terminate employee and told her to "get
out!"). Indeed, "[u]nder Virginia law,
an officer or director of a corporation
is liable only for those intentional
torts he or she commits or authorizes on
behalf of the corporation,"Airlines
Reporting Corp. v. Pishvaian, 155
F.Supp.2d 659, 666 (E.D.Va.2001) (citing
Sit-Set, A.G. v. Universal Jet Exch.,
Inc., 747 F.2d 921 (4th Cir.1984) and
Miller v. Quarles, 242 Va. 343, 410
S.E.2d 639, 641-42 (1991)), and there is
no reason to believe that such a *740
rule should not equally apply to LLC's
because even though "a [LLC] is an
entity that, like a corporation," is
designed to "shield [ ] its members from
personal liability based on actions of
the entity,"see Gowin, 634 S.E.2d at
719, a LLC member should still be held
individually liable if he or she
personally participates in a tort
committed by the LLC or directs it to be
done. See, e.g., Milk v. Total Pay & HR
Solutions, Inc., 280 Ga.App. 449, 634
S.E.2d 208, 213 (2006); see also Karin
Schwindt, Comment, Limited Liability
Companies: Issues in Member Liability,
44 UCLA L.Rev. 1541, 1548 (1997) ("If a
member commits a tort while in the
course of LLC business, she may be held
personally liable for that tort. The LLC
limited liability shield cannot protect
her.") (internal footnotes omitted).FN8
FN8. To the extent Lucker v. Cole Vision
Corp., Civil Action No. 7:05CV00126,
2005 WL 1411655 (W.D.Va. June 16, 2005),
is to the contrary, the Court
respectfully disagrees with that court's
analysis for the reasons set forth
herein.
The Court is keenly aware of Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 8(a)'s liberal
notice pleading requirements, especially
in the employment discrimination
context, whereby a plaintiff's complaint
need only contain "a short and plain
statement of the claim showing that the
pleader is entitled to relief."
Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(a)(2). Indeed, the
Supreme Court in Swierkiewicz held that
there is not a heightened pleading
standard for employment discrimination
suits and that a plaintiff in such an
action need not plead a prima facie case
to withstand a motion to dismiss. 534
U.S. at 515, 122 S.Ct. 992. And, of
course, at the motion to dismiss stage
in the proceedings, the issue is not
whether the plaintiff will ultimately
prevail, but whether the claimant is
entitled to offer evidence to support
the claims. See id. at 511, 122 S.Ct.
992 (citation omitted). But the Fourth
Circuit has not interpreted Swierkiewicz
to relieve a plaintiff of the burden "to
allege facts sufficient to state all the
elements of her claim." Bass v. E.I.
DuPont de Nemours & Co., 324 F.3d 761,
765 (4th Cir.), cert. denied,540 U.S.
940, 124 S.Ct. 301, 157 L.Ed.2d 253
(2003). In other words, "[w]hile a
plaintiff is not charged with pleading
facts sufficient to prove her case, as
an evidentiary matter, in her complaint,
a plaintiff is required to allege facts
that support a claim for relief." Id.
(emphasis in original).
It seems apparent to the Court that if a
member, manager, or agent of a Virginia
LLC cannot, as a matter of law, be
liable in tort for actions of the LLC
solely because that person is a member,
manager, or agent of that LLC,
seeVa.Code Ann. § 13.1-1019, then a
plaintiff should plead facts
demonstrating a particular member's
culpability in the LLC's tortious
conduct that extends beyond that
person's mere status as a member of the
company. McFarland has only made such
allegations with respect to Defendant
Mary Dunmoyer. Therefore, the individual
Defendants (with the exception of Mary
Dunmoyer) are dismissed from Counts II
and III of McFarland's Amended
Complaint, with leave to amend should
the discovery process produce evidence
to the effect that the other individual
Defendants played meaningful roles in
the decision to terminate McFarland's
employment. Accordingly, Defendants
Robert Dunmoyer and Ben Stalker Read
must be dismissed as parties to Counts
II and III of the Amended Complaint, but
without prejudice for the reasons
discussed, supra, in footnote six (n.
6).
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth herein, the
Defendants' Motion to Dismiss is GRANTED
IN PART, and DENIED IN PART.
An appropriate Order shall issue.
*741 ORDER
This matter is before the Court, by
consent of the parties, on the
Defendants' Partial Motion to Dismiss
pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure for failure to
state a claim upon which relief can be
granted (docket entry no. 14). For the
reasons set forth in the accompanying
Memorandum Opinion, it is hereby ORDERED
that:
(1) The Defendants' Motion to Dismiss is
GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART.
Specifically,
A. Defendant Virginia Retirement
Services of Chesterfield, L.L.C. d/b/a
Magnolias of Chesterfield and Defendant
Mary Dunmoyer are proper parties to the
Plaintiff's common law wrongful
discharge claim (Count II of the Amended
Complaint);
B. Defendants Robert Dunmoyer and Ben
Stalker Reed are Dismissed as parties to
Count II of the Plaintiff's Amended
Complaint, with leave to amend should
the Plaintiff be so advised;
C. Plaintiff's
Retaliation/Discrimination claim in
violation of Va. Code Ann. § 40.1-51.2:2
(Count III of the Amended Complaint) is
Dismissed against all of the Defendants,
with prejudice; and
D. In accordance with the parties' prior
stipulations, Defendant David H.
Matthews and Defendant Frances Wood
Loughlin are dismissed as parties to the
present lawsuit (Counts I, II, and III)
without prejudice, with leave to amend
should the Plaintiff be so advised.
(Docket entry nos. 35 & 37.)
Let the Clerk forward a copy of this
Order and the accompanying Memorandum
Opinion to all counsel of record. It is
so ORDERED.
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