Category Archives: At-will employment rule

When Personal Conduct Off the Clock Leads to Termination: Off-Duty Behavior and Employment Law

Let’s talk about some­thing that’s become more and more rel­e­vant in today’s world—off-duty con­duct. What hap­pens when an employ­ee gets into trou­ble out­side of work? Can an employ­er fire some­one for some­thing they did on their own time? And how do courts draw the line between pri­vate behav­ior and job-relat­ed consequences?

The short answer: yes, employ­ers often can ter­mi­nate some­one for off-duty con­duct, but it depends heav­i­ly on the circumstances—and there are key legal pro­tec­tions that lim­it this right.

This area of law lives in a gray zone where employ­ment at-will, pub­lic pol­i­cy, dis­crim­i­na­tion statutes, and even social media all over­lap. Let’s dive in.

At-Will Employment and the Right to Terminate

As you know, West Vir­ginia is an at-will employ­ment state, like most of the coun­try. That means employ­ers can gen­er­al­ly ter­mi­nate an employ­ee for any reason—or no rea­son at all—so long as it’s not ille­gal or in vio­la­tion of a pub­lic pol­i­cy. See W. Va. Code § 21–5‑4 and Felix v. Grafton City Hos­pi­tal, 447 S.E.2d 418 (W. Va. 1994).

So, in the­o­ry, an employ­er could fire an employ­ee because of some­thing they did off the clock—say, a bar fight, a con­tro­ver­sial Face­book post, or a DUI arrest.

But the­o­ry and prac­tice aren’t always the same.

Con­tin­ue read­ing When Per­son­al Con­duct Off the Clock Leads to Ter­mi­na­tion: Off-Duty Behav­ior and Employ­ment Law