Legal Question in Employment Law in Washington

Wrongful Termination

I was recently terminated after 17 years of employment for what the company deemed ''unethical conduct''. I was accused of reading someone elses email of a sensitive nature. I firmly deny any wrong doing. The company says they have proof, none of which was presented to me. I say, I have proof. I want to know if I have a case for wrongful termination? If anyone responds to this, and would like additional information, please contact me.


Asked on 11/09/01, 12:49 pm

2 Answers from Attorneys

Charles Cruikshank Cruikshank Law Office-Since 1975

Re: Wrongful Termination

In Washington State, the rule of law known as "employment at will" applies. That means that the default is that you or the employer can terminate the employment relationship at any time for any reason (or no reason).

If there are changes to this such as a company policy that alters this (perhaps by guaranteeing that you get a hearing if you are to be terminated) then the default employment at will may no longer apply.

Of course, people are sometimes terminated, ostensibly for one reason, while a forbidden reason is actually the real cause of the termination. For instance, a person may be terminated for allegedly reading a sensitive email, but their boss is really discriminating against the employee's religion.

Without knowing more of the actual facts and background, it's very hard to say if you have a valid claim against your former employer.

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Answered on 11/09/01, 1:12 pm
Gary Preble Preble Law Firm, P.S.

Re: Wrongful Termination

Were you under a contract? Was there an employee's manual that suggests you have termination rights? Is there an underlying problem here, such as office politics or favoritism, that would suggest unlawful discrimination? There are exceptions to employment at will, but your question does not give enough details.

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Answered on 11/09/01, 1:42 pm


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