USCA1 Opinion
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
____________________
No. 92-1886
FRANK X. LOSACCO,
Plaintiff, Appellant,
v.
F.D. RICH CONSTRUCTION CO., INC.,
Defendant, Appellee.
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APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. Frank H. Freedman, U.S. District Judge]
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____________________
Before
Breyer, Chief Judge,
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Torruella and Boudin, Circuit Judges.
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_____________________
Paul F. Kelly, with
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whom
Shelley B. Kroll,
_________________
and
Segal,
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Roitman & Coleman, were on brief for appellant.
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Lewis G. Schwartz, with whom Gary S. Klein, and Schatz &
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Schatz, Ribicoff & Kotkin, were on brief for appellee.
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May 10, 1993
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TORRUELLA, Circuit Judge.
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that
appellee
ended
determined
that
therefore
found
employment
appellant was
no
Appellant now claims
erroneous
his
that the
improperly.
terminated
violation
instruction as
At trial, appellant claimed
of
his
to "just
vacate the judgment
just cause
employment
district court gave
cause" and
admissible relevant evidence at trial.
court to
for
and order
The
jury
and
contract.
the jury
an
wrongly excluded
Appellant thus asks this
a retrial.
Because we
find no error in the district court's instructions or evidentiary
rulings, we do not grant appellant his requests.
THE FACTS
THE FACTS
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Appellant is a structural engineer with an expertise in
pre-cast concrete
matters
involving
construction.
pre-cast
Connecticut headquarters.
be more profitable
them from
He worked
concrete
at
as a consultant
appellee's
on
Stamford,
Appellee soon determined that it would
to make pre-cast
outside vendors.
products instead of
The company thus set
buying
up a factory
for this purpose in Pittsfield, Massachusetts and hired appellant
to manage it.
The
dispute.
details of
Appellant
the employment
contends
that
he
contract are
agreed
in sharp
to manage
the
Pittsfield facility for a minimum of three years, in exchange for
salary and benefits including housing in Pittsfield for the three
year
was
term.
an
Appellee, on the other hand, contends that appellant
at-will employee,
company.
In
any event,
as were
all
other employees
appellant began work
of the
in Pittsfield
in
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August, 1987.
In October 1987, the
the plant,
announced its
company's senior managers visited
immediate closure, and
terminated all
employees,
closed
including appellant.
the plant to
contends that it
downturn
in
thwart union activity.
decided to
the
Appellant claims that appellee
close the plant
Northeast
construction projects.
Appellee, however,
real
estate
Appellee
because the
market
also claimed
sharp
affected
its
that appellant's
performance was inadequate.
Appellant
contract
no
sued,
claiming that
to employ him for three years.
contract
termination
was
formed, but
was
Massachusetts
for "just
law.
cross-examine a
that
cause"
During
even
and
the trial,
appellee was
bound by
Appellee responded that
if
one existed,
therefore proper
the
under
appellant attempted
former supervisor about testimony
to
at a National
Labor Relations Board hearing to the effect that there was plenty
of work
at the plant.
plant's
closing.
The hearing occurred
The
questioning, finding
district court
it beyond the scope
judge
shortly before the
disallowed
this
of direct examination,
and more prejudicial than probative.
At the close of evidence, the district court instructed
the jury that if a contract existed, termination for "just cause"
would be proper.
The district court judge defined
"just cause"
as 1) poor performance by appellant on the job or 2) a good faith
determination that
the economic
appellant's discharge.
During
needs of the
business required
deliberations, the jury asked the
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judge to repeat its definition of "just cause."
found that
the
a contract for fixed-term
parties, but
appellant.
that
employment existed between
"just cause"
This appeal
followed
The jury finally
allowed
appellee to
in which
appellant
fire
seeks a
retrial on only the breach of contract claims.
DISCUSSION
DISCUSSION
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Appellant
First,
urges two
errors in
the
jury instruction.
he contends that the instruction does not reflect the law
in Massachusetts as to the definition of just cause.
claims that
the
jury,
the instruction
by
settling a
improperly invaded the
question
of
fact,
Second, he
province of
in violation
of
Massachusetts law.
As appellant claims that the jury instruction
incorrectly stated
Massachusetts contract
novo.
____
law, we review
Salve Regina College v. Russell, 111
_____________________
_______
(mandating
de novo
_______
review
of
district
it de
__
S. Ct. 1217 (1991)
court's
determinations).
The suspect instruction reads as follows:
An employer has just cause to discharge
an employee
if,
one, there
is
a
reasonable
basis
for
employer
dissatisfaction with an employee, for
reasons such as lack of capacity or
diligence, failure to conform to usual
state
law
standards of conduct, or other culpable
or inappropriate behavior.
Or two, the
discharge is reasonably related, in the
employer's
honest
judgment, to
the
economic needs of his business.
The district court derived
a duo of Massachusetts
this instruction almost verbatim from
cases, Goldhor v. Hampshire College, 521
_______
__________________
N.E.2d 1381, 1385 (Mass.
App. Ct. 1988), and Klein
_____
v. President
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-4-
and Fellows of Harvard College, 517 N.E.2d 167, 169
_______________________________
Ct. 1987).
Although those
definition, they
employee either
Because
the
cases stated the
focussed on the
did or
meet the performance
not invoke
definition, appellant argues that
not
entire just
first prong, holding
did not
holdings did
(Mass. App.
the
cause
that the
standard.
second prong
of the
the economic needs standard is
a part of Massachusetts law but rather dicta by intermediate
state courts.
We
issued
federal
As such, it cannot support a jury instruction.
disagree.
a definitive
courts
dicta, scholarly
may
When the
highest state
court has
ruling on
the precise
refer
analogous decisions,
works, or
to
issue at
other reliable sources
not
hand, the
considered
to ascertain
how
the highest court would
rule.
Orchestra, Inc., 855
_______________
F.2d 888,
cert. denied,
_____________
U.S.
intermediate
488
ascertaining state
law.
v. Boston Symphony
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903 (1st Cir.
1043
state appellate
Redgrave
________
(1989).
courts
are
1988) (en
The
banc),
decisions
trustworthy data
CPC International, Inc.
_______________________
of
for
v. Northbrook
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Excess & Surplus Insurance Co., 962 F.2d 77, 91 (1st Cir. 1992).
______________________________
The
Massachusetts
answered the precise
Supreme
issue at
Judicial
hand -- whether
terminate a fixed-term employee
Court
has
not
an employer
may
due to economic
considerations.
The plaintiffs in Goldhor and Klein were fixed-term employees and
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_____
therefore
similarly
considered dicta
situated
in those
to
appellant.
such,
cases concerning terminations
economic necessity represents a reliable statement
Massachusetts.
As
the
due to
of the law in
The district court did not err in relying on it.
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There is no
indication that the
highest court of
would define just cause any differently.
Massachusetts
To the contrary, we note that Massachusetts courts have
defined just cause, or similar language, in a virtually identical
manner
in
other
definition
contexts.
and
Klein
_____
derived
the
of just cause from G & M Employment Service, Inc. v.
_______________________________
Commonwealth, 265 N.E.2d
____________
highest
court
purposes
of a
in
476 (Mass.
Massachusetts
the definition
include Amoco Oil Co. v.
______________
just
that case,
the
cause
the
for
private employment
and Klein.
_____
terminations
agencies.
precursor to
Other Massachusetts
due to
Dickson, 389 N.E.2d
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(franchise agreement) and Karcz
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N.E.2d 441
In
that case was the direct
used in Goldhor
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validating premature
1970).
defined
statute regulating
The court's definition in
cases
Goldhor
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economic
need
406 (Mass.
1979)
v. Luther Manufacturing Co., 155
________________________
(Mass. 1959) (collective bargaining
agreement).
See
___
also Foreign Motors, Inc. v. Audi of America, Inc., 755 F. Supp.
____ ____________________
______________________
30 (D. Mass. 1991) (franchise agreement).
us
to, and
we have found,
Appellant has directed
no cases involving
prohibit economically-motivated terminations.
of authority,
we believe that
just cause which
Given the
the jury instruction,
weight
taken from
Goldhor and Klein, correctly set forth Massachusetts law.
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_____
Appellant's second attack
on that instruction
claimed
that the instruction improperly invaded the province of the jury.
Consistent
with
the
law
on
economically-based
discharges,
however, the jury
could decide whether
business judgment to
appellee made an
close the plant.
Appellant
honest
cannot contend
-6-
that the
parties contemplated
just
meaning in this context because
the
existence
properly
of such
relied on
the
cause to
have a
different
there was no evidence indicating
an alternate
meaning.
The
implied Massachusetts
court thus
definition.
decline appellant's invitation to remand the case
We
for retrial or
to certify the state law question due to the jury instruction.
We
turn now
to appellant's
arguments
concerning the
exclusion of certain evidence.
Appellant sought to cross-examine
a witness
was plenty of
to show
that there
shortly before its closing.
appellee
would relate
effect.
To elicit this
matter of some concern
organize,
wasn't
it?"
work at
Appellant hoped that an
testimony from
an NLRB
Appellee
officer of
hearing to
testimony, appellant asked
to you that the
the plant
this
"[i]t was a
employees were going
promptly
objected
to
to
the
relevance of the question, and the judge held a bench conference.
Appellant there indicated that he wished
to elicit the testimony
concerning the amount of work at the plant.
The
district
court
excluded the testimony because the
direct
as
to the
supervisor did not testify on
motivation behind
the
plant closing
or the
economic woes troubling the company.
We review a district
court's evidentiary rulings
only
for abuse of discretion, e.g., Willhauck v. Halpin, 953 F.2d 689,
____ _________
______
717 (1st Cir.
1991), and the district court
abuse in this instance.
establish
that
reasons.
The
The new line
the plant
was
of questioning sought
not closed
witness, however,
did not commit such
did
for
not
to
honest business
testify
as to
the
examination.
The
-7-
motivation for
the company's action on direct
district court
therefore properly
refused to entertain
the new
line of questioning pursuant to Fed. R. Evid. 611(b).
Of
course, trial judges,
disregard Rule
however, that
constitutes
reasonably
that it
Even
if
611(b).
Fed.
R. Evid.
the district court's
an
abuse
of
believed that
would ascribe an
appellant sought
within their discretion, may
611(b).
We
decision to follow
discretion.
the question
The
that
the rule
district
court
threatened prejudice
unfair anti-union animus
to show
cannot say,
the plant
in
to appellee.
closing was
motivated
minimal
by
explanation
Appellant
pursuing
such animus,
should have
the
or
this
single
question supported
proffer
cannot
overcome
presented a
questioning, or
more coherent
revived
the
by
Rule 611(b).
rationale for
questioning when
witness testified as to such motivation.
Because we have found no cause to remand the case for a
new
trial,
limited
we need
not address
whether
that trial
should be
to the breach of contract issues or should encompass all
issues in the case.
Affirmed.
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