Discrimination
Due to anti-discrimination legislation passed by Congress in the late 1960's and 1970's, it had become illegal to terminate anyone on the basis of race, gender, religion, color, national origin and disability. These are the most important anti-discrimination limitations on employment at will, but there are many more.
The public-policy exception
Under the public policy exception an employee would be considered “wrongfully discharged” if their firing contravened some explicit well established public policy of the state in which they work. Below are some examples of dismissals under the public policy exception:
- Getting fired for filing a workers compensation claim after being injured on the job;
- Refusal to break the law at the request of the employer
The Implied Contract Exception
Even if you do not have a formal employment contract many employers have stated policies, either orally or in writing, regulating dismissals in the workplace and other rules.
These implied contracts are recognized in 38 states and usually take the form of employee handbooks guaranteeing that employees will be terminated only for “just cause” or for non-arbitrary reasons.
If you live in one of these 38 states and you have an employee handbook that outlines procedures for termination of employment then you may not be an at will employee.
Find out if you are in one of the 38 states covered by the implied contract exception.
The Covenant-of-Good-Faith Exception
This exception is recognized by only 11 states and, at its broadest, is understood as meaning that in every employment relationship, there is the understanding employees should be terminated for “just cause.” More specifically, that employees should not be fired because of malice or other arbitrary reasons.