[Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as
Lunsford v. Sterilite of Ohio, L.L.C., Slip Opinion No. 2020-Ohio-4193.]




                                        NOTICE
     This slip opinion is subject to formal revision before it is published in an
     advance sheet of the Ohio Official Reports. Readers are requested to
     promptly notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of Ohio, 65
     South Front Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215, of any typographical or other
     formal errors in the opinion, in order that corrections may be made before
     the opinion is published.



                         SLIP OPINION NO. 2020-OHIO-4193
      LUNSFORD ET AL., APPELLEES, v. STERILITE OF OHIO, L.L.C., ET AL,
                                     APPELLANTS.
  [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it
     may be cited as Lunsford v. Sterilite of Ohio, L.L.C., Slip Opinion No.
                                   2020-Ohio-4193.]
Torts—Employment law—Invasion of privacy—When an at-will employee
        consents, without objection, to the collection of the employee’s urine sample
        under the direct-observation method, the at-will employee has no cause of
        action for invasion of privacy—Court of appeals’ judgment reversed and
        common pleas court’s judgment reinstated.
   (No. 2018-1431—Submitted January 28, 2020—Decided August 26, 2020.)
                APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Stark County,
                        No. 2017CA00232, 2018-Ohio-3437.
                                 __________________
                             SUPREME COURT OF OHIO




        KENNEDY, J.
        {¶ 1} In this discretionary appeal from a judgment of the Fifth District Court
of Appeals, we consider whether an at-will employee has a cause of action for
common-law invasion of privacy as a result of his or her private employer’s
implementation of a workplace substance-abuse policy requiring the employee to
submit a urine sample for drug testing under the “direct-observation method.” For
the reasons set forth below, we conclude that when an at-will employee consents,
without objection, to the collection of his or her urine sample under the direct-
observation method, the at-will employee has no cause of action for common-law
invasion of privacy. Therefore, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals
and reinstate the judgment of the trial court.
                   FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
        {¶ 2} The complaint alleges that appellees Adam Keim and Laura
Williamson are former at-will employees of appellant, Sterilite of Ohio, L.L.C.
Appellees Donna L. Lunsford and Peter D. Griffiths are current at-will employees
of Sterilite.
        {¶ 3} Sterilite, a private company, has a workplace substance-abuse policy
that applies to all its employees, and compliance with the policy is a condition of
employment.     The purpose of the policy is to “promote a healthy, safe and
productive workplace for all employees.” The policy reserves to Sterilite the
discretion to change the policy at any time.
        {¶ 4} The policy sets out three circumstances under which Sterilite may
exercise its discretion to require an employee to submit to drug testing: while
investigating a workplace accident or incident, when there is reasonable suspicion
that an employee may be impaired by drugs or alcohol, and randomly at periodic
intervals. The policy also provides that urinalysis will be used to test for an
employee’s illegal use of drugs or improper use of prescription or over-the-counter
drugs, but it is silent on how the urine sample will be collected.




                                          2
                                January Term, 2020




       {¶ 5} Under the policy, a supervisor informs an employee when and where
he or she is to report for testing. If the employee does not produce a valid urine
sample within two and a half hours, the employee will be considered to have refused
to take the test. An employee who refuses to take the test is subject to immediate
termination. An employee whose urine sample tests positive for illegal drugs or
prohibited use of prescription or over-the-counter drugs is subject to disciplinary
action, up to and including termination.
       {¶ 6} Appellant U.S. Healthworks Medical Group of Ohio, Inc., administers
Sterilite’s workplace drug-testing program. To facilitate drug testing under the
policy, Sterilite designated a restroom to be used exclusively for the collection of
urine samples.    According to appellees’ complaint, U.S. Healthworks began
collecting urine samples for drug testing by the “direct-observation method” in
October 2016. Under that method, a same-sex monitor was required to accompany
the employee to the restroom to visually observe the employee produce the urine
sample.
       {¶ 7} Lunsford, Williamson, and Griffiths were selected by Sterilite for
random drug testing on October 4 and 12 and November 8, 2016, respectively.
Keim was asked to submit to drug testing based on the policy’s reasonable-
suspicion-of-impairment provision on October 9, 2016. When appellees were
instructed by their respective supervisors to report to the restroom designated by
Sterilite for drug testing, each complied.
       {¶ 8} At the beginning of the testing process, each appellee executed a
statement titled “Consent and Release” (“consent form”) provided by U.S.
Healthworks. The consent form provided:


       I hereby give my consent to and authorize U.S. Healthworks staff
       and its designated laboratory to perform any testing necessary to
       determine the presence and/or level of drugs in my body on behalf




                                             3
                            SUPREME COURT OF OHIO




       of my * * * current employer, whose name I entered above. I further
       give my consent for U.S. Healthworks to release any and all results
       to the aforementioned employer. I agree to hold harmless all U.S.
       Healthworks employees, physicians, and agents involved in the
       performance of the testing, from any action that may arise from the
       disclosure of such test results to the aforementioned employer * * *.


       {¶ 9} Appellees did not know at the time they executed the consent form
that his or her urine sample would be collected under the direct-observation method.
None of the appellees had previously submitted a urine sample under the direct
observation-method. Appellees were notified that the direct-observation method
would be used when they reported to the restroom designated exclusively for urine
collection.
       {¶ 10} Appellees each proceeded with the drug test under the direct-
observation method without objection. Lunsford and Griffiths were each able to
produce a valid urine sample. Keim and Williamson alleged in the complaint that
they each made “good faith efforts” to produce a valid urine sample but were
unable to do so within two and a half hours. Sterilite terminated Keim’s and
Williamson’s employment pursuant to the policy.
       {¶ 11} Appellees filed in the Stark County Court of Common Pleas an
eight-count complaint against appellants on December 22, 2016. At issue here is
Count One of appellees’ complaint, which alleged that Sterilite and U.S.
Healthworks invaded appellees’ privacy by requiring them to submit their urine
samples under the direct-observation method. Appellees incorporated the policy
into their complaint.
       {¶ 12} Appellees argued that Ohio law recognizes an individual’s right to
privacy and to freedom from unreasonable invasion of one’s privacy. Appellees
contended that because the direct-observation method is so “highly offensive to a




                                         4
                                January Term, 2020




person of ordinary sensibilities,” Ohio’s courts should balance the intrusion of the
direct-observation method against the employer’s legitimate business interests in
conducting drug testing by that method. And if the intrusion outweighs the
employer’s interests in conducting drug testing by that method, then the employer
should be liable for invasion of privacy.
       {¶ 13} In support of their arguments, appellees cited guidelines limiting the
use of the direct-observation method published by the United States Department of
Agriculture (“USDA”), the United States Department of Health and Human
Services (“USDHHS”), and the United States Department of Transportation
(“USDOT”) that were promulgated following an executive order of the President
of the United States and acts of the United States Congress (i.e., when the
employee’s prior drug-test results were reported to be positive for drugs,
adulterated, or substituted; or a specimen was invalid without an adequate medical
explanation; or when the temperature of the collected specimen was outside the
acceptable range, the employee’s conduct indicated possible           adulteration or
substitution of the specimen, or the specimen exhibited signs that it was tampered
with during collection).
       {¶ 14} Sterilite filed a motion to dismiss on January 17, 2017.           U.S.
Healthworks filed a motion to dismiss on February 21, 2017. The trial court granted
appellants’ motions to dismiss on May 9, 2017, determining that the crux of
appellees’ invasion-of-privacy claim is that Sterilite’s substance-abuse policy
authorizes the collection of urine samples through the direct-observation method
“without requiring evidence, or a reasonable basis to suspect, that a particular
employee is likely to taint, tamper with, or otherwise compromise the integrity” of
the sample. The trial court accepted appellees’ factual allegations as true. The trial
court noted that appellees had acknowledged that Ohio employees have no
actionable invasion-of-privacy claim based on an employer’s implementation of
“random and suspicionless drug screening” as part of its workplace substance-




                                            5
                             SUPREME COURT OF OHIO




abuse policy. It also noted that as support for the invasion-of privacy-claim,
appellees relied on the federal guidelines regarding the use of the direct-observation
method that had been published by the USDA, USDHHS, and USDOT. But it
determined that the policies of government entities are inapplicable because
appellants are private companies and there is no state actor involved in this case. It
further determined that Ohio does not recognize an invasion-of-privacy claim by
an at-will employee based solely on an employer’s use of the direct-observation
method during drug testing, particularly when the at-will employee agreed to be
tested as a condition of employment.
       {¶ 15} The Fifth District reversed, holding that appellees had stated a valid
claim for invasion of privacy pursuant to this court’s decision in Housh v. Peth, 165
Ohio St. 35, 133 N.E.2d 340 (1956). 2018-Ohio-3437, ¶ 43. In reaching that
conclusion, the court of appeals determined that appellees have a “reasonable
expectation of privacy with regard to the exposure of their genitals.” Id. at ¶ 27.
After finding no binding precedent on the direct-observation method, the court of
appeals examined caselaw from other Ohio appellate districts, other states, federal
circuit courts, and the United States Supreme Court, including cases considering
claims involving alleged Fourth Amendment privacy violations. Id. at ¶ 28-43.
       {¶ 16} Sterilite and U.S. Healthworks appealed to this court. We accepted
for review the following proposition of law submitted by Sterilite:


               Employees of a private employer in the State of Ohio do not
       have a reasonable expectation of privacy in whether they are
       reporting to work under the influence of drugs, or whether they are
       cheating on a drug test. Absent allegations that the manner of testing
       used by a private employer to obtain this information is not job-
       related and consistent with business necessity, an at-will employee




                                          6
                                  January Term, 2020




          cannot maintain an action against [his or] her employer for invasion
          of privacy.


See 154 Ohio St.3d 1463, 2018-Ohio-5209, 114 N.E.3d 214. And we accepted for
review the following two propositions of law submitted by U.S. Healthworks:


                 Requiring employees to provide a monitored urine sample to
          independent laboratory personnel as part of an employer’s random
          drug testing policy does not constitute an invasion of the employees’
          common law right to privacy as a matter of law.
          ***
                 Ohio law does not recognize a cause of action for invasion
          of privacy against independent third-party laboratories or their
          trained staff who are hired to collect and test urine samples as part
          of a drug testing policy between an employer and employee by the
          direct observation method of collection when the employee signs a
          consent authorizing any testing necessary to determine the presence
          or level of drugs.


See id.
                         ARGUMENTS OF THE PARTIES
          {¶ 17} Because we resolve this matter by addressing U.S. Healthworks’
second proposition of law, we decline to address Sterilite’s proposition of law and
U.S. Healthworks’ first proposition of law.
          {¶ 18} Sterilite argues that appellees’ status as former or current at-will
employees is fatal to their invasion-of-privacy claim. It contends that appellees’
compliance with the substance-abuse policy was a condition of their employment




                                           7
                              SUPREME COURT OF OHIO




and their consent to drug testing and lack of objection to the use of the direct-
observation method negates their claim.
        {¶ 19} U.S. Healthworks agrees with Sterilite that appellees’ consent and
voluntary participation in the drug-testing program negates their claim. It notes
that appellees signed a consent form and were advised that the direct-observation
method would be used to collect their urine samples and that each appellee
proceeded to take the test. It further notes that two appellees produced valid urine
samples and that the other two appellees made what they have deemed “good faith
efforts” to produce valid urine samples.
        {¶ 20} Appellees concede that they were or are at-will employees and that
Sterilite’s substance-abuse policy is justified. Nevertheless, appellees argue that no
employee should be expected to completely relinquish his or her right to privacy so
that an employer can conduct drug testing in any manner the employer chooses and
that the direct-observation method of urine collection crosses the line of what is
acceptable in the right-to-privacy context.
        {¶ 21} Appellees deny that they consented to be tested under the direct-
observation method and advance two arguments in support of that contention. First,
appellees argue that appellants have construed the language in the consent form too
expansively. Appellees argue that they gave consent to U.S. Healthworks to test
their urine samples and to release the results of their tests to Sterilite. But appellees
argue that they did not consent to the use of the direct-observation method.
Appellees note that they learned about the use of the direct-observation method
after they signed the consent form when they reported for drug testing. Second,
appellees argue that their submission to be tested under the direct-observation
method was involuntary. The alternative to complying was to be ushered out the
door with a “pink slip” in hand.




                                           8
                                January Term, 2020




                             LAW AND ANALYSIS
                                 Standard of review
       {¶ 22} “An order granting a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss is subject to
de novo review.” Perrysburg Twp. v. Rossford, 103 Ohio St.3d 79, 2004-Ohio-
4362, 814 N.E.2d 44, ¶ 5. In reviewing a motion to dismiss for failure to state a
claim upon which relief can be granted, we accept as true all factual allegations in
the complaint. Mitchell v. Lawson Milk Co., 40 Ohio St.3d 190, 192, 532 N.E.2d
753 (1988). A complaint should not be dismissed unless it appears “beyond doubt
from the complaint that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts entitling him to
recovery.” O’Brien v. Univ. Community Tenants Union, Inc., 42 Ohio St.2d 242,
327 N.E.2d 753 (1975), syllabus.
       {¶ 23} This case places two common-law principles—the doctrine of
employment at will and the tort of invasion of privacy—in competition with each
other. The fundamental principle of appellees’ argument is that the employment-
at-will doctrine must yield to an employee’s right to privacy. Therefore, in
appellees’ view, the common-law right to privacy enhances their rights under the
employment-at-will doctrine and diminishes their employer’s rights under the
doctrine. However,


       “[i]n determining the extent of the right of privacy, it is essential to consider
       it in the light of duties imposed on individuals as citizens of a free country
       and in the light of an individual’s relation to the community of which he is
       a member, and such right does not extend so far as to subvert those rights
       which spring from social conditions, including business relations.”


Earp v. Detroit, 16 Mich.App. 271, 276, 167 N.W.2d 841 (1969), quoting 77
Corpus Juris Secundum, Right of Privacy, Section 3, at 401-402.




                                          9
                              SUPREME COURT OF OHIO




       {¶ 24} Therefore, because the right to privacy must be considered within
the context of other rights and because Sterilite argues that appellees’ status as at-
will employees is fatal to their claim, we begin by considering the underpinnings
of the employment-at-will doctrine.
                             Employment-at-will doctrine
       {¶ 25} Ohio has long recognized the employment-at-will doctrine. See La
France Elec. Constr. Supply Co. v. Internatl. Bhd. of Elec. Workers, Local No. 8,
108 Ohio St. 61, 140 N.E. 899 (1923), syllabus. Either party to an at-will
employment contract—employer or employee—can terminate the employment
relationship for “any reason which is not contrary to law.” Mers v. Dispatch
Printing Co., 19 Ohio St.3d 100, 103, 483 N.E.2d 150 (1985). And either party to
an at-will employment contract can propose changes to the terms of their
employment relationship at any time. Lake Land Emp. Group of Akron, L.L.C. v.
Columber, 101 Ohio St.3d 242, 2004-Ohio-786, 804 N.E.2d 27, ¶ 18. As illustrated
by the court in Lake Land:


       If, for instance, an employer notifies an employee that the
       employee’s compensation will be reduced, the employee’s remedy,
       if dissatisfied, is to quit. Similarly, if the employee proposes to the
       employer that he deserves a raise and will no longer work at his
       current rate, the employer may either negotiate an increase or accept
       the loss of his employee.


Id.
       {¶ 26} However, the at-will-employment relationship is not without its
limits. For example, legislative bodies have enacted laws prohibiting retaliatory
discharge when an injured worker files a workers’ compensation claim or engages
in union activities and prohibiting discrimination on the basis of age, sex, race, or




                                         10
                               January Term, 2020




disability. Mers at 103. And this court has recognized other exceptions to the at-
will-employment doctrine, including actions involving promissory estoppel and
breach of an implied contract. Id. at paragraphs two and three of the syllabus.
       {¶ 27} The extent of appellees’ privacy rights must be construed within the
context of their status as at-will employees.         Appellees concede that their
employment was or is conditioned on their compliance with Sterilite’s workplace
substance-abuse policy. But Sterilite’s substance-abuse policy and its conditioning
appellees’ employment on their compliance with the policy is not the crux of this
controversy. It is the manner in which the policy was carried out—the use of the
direct-observation method during the collection of the urine sample—that is the
core of this controversy. Therefore, we turn to the common-law tort of invasion of
privacy.
                                Invasion of privacy
       {¶ 28} The heart of appellees’ argument is that absent just cause—which
could include an employee’s past positive drug test or evidence or reasonable
suspicion of urine-sample tampering or adulteration, or the employee’s express
consent—an at-will employer may not use what it calls the “highly offensive”
direct-observation method to administer a workplace substance-abuse policy. To
say it another way, an employer that without just cause uses the “highly offensive”
direct-observation method for collecting a urine sample creates an actionable
invasion-of-privacy claim by the employee.
       {¶ 29} Appellees’ argument does not originate from the Ohio Constitution
or the Revised Code. Appellees urge this court to not immunize at-will employers
from invasion-of-privacy claims “just because other judge-made rules” have given
employers the “privilege” to perform workplace substance-abuse testing.
Appellees assert that at-will employers should not have “unfettered discretion” in
choosing the method of urine collection.




                                        11
                              SUPREME COURT OF OHIO




        {¶ 30} Appellees argue that this court should apply our decision in Housh,
165 Ohio St. 35, 133 N.E.2d 340, which appellees believe would strike the right
balance between the competing interests of an employer administering a workplace
substance-abuse policy and the privacy rights of the employees subject to the
policy. And they urge this court to follow the decision in Wilcher v. Wilmington,
139 F.3d 366 (3rd Cir.1998), and to endorse the drug-testing protocols at issue in
Wilkinson v. Times Mirror Corp., 215 Cal.App.3d 1034, 264 Cal.Rptr. 194 (1989),
which would limit the use of the “highly offensive” direct-observation method to
situations in which its use is justified.
        {¶ 31} We dispense quickly with appellees’ arguments based on the
decisions in Wilcher and Wilkinson because the facts and law involved in those
cases are easily distinguishable from the facts and law involved in this case.
Wilcher involved a public employer and a Fourth Amendment challenge to the
government’s use of the direct-observation method. Wilcher at 373. Wilkinson,
while involving a private employer, involved a privacy challenge under an express
provision of the California Constitution and an unfair-business-practice challenge
under the California Business and Professions Code. Wilkinson at 1039. Sterilite,
however, is a private company and is not a state actor. There is no Fourth
Amendment challenge before us here, no provision of the Ohio Constitution has
been implicated, and there is no Ohio statute underpinning appellees’ invasion-of-
privacy claim. Our review of appellees’ invasion-of-privacy claim is limited to
their arguments based on the common-law right to privacy.
        {¶ 32} We first recognized the common-law right to privacy in Housh at
paragraph one of the syllabus. To be actionable, the invasion of privacy must
involve “the unwarranted appropriation or exploitation of one’s personality, the
publicizing of one’s private affairs with which the public has no legitimate concern,
or the wrongful intrusion into one’s private activities in such a manner as to outrage
or cause mental suffering, shame or humiliation to a person of ordinary




                                            12
                                January Term, 2020




sensibilities.” Id. at paragraph two of the syllabus. Appellees’ claim is based on
the third right-to-privacy violation recognized in Housh—the wrongful intrusion
into one’s private activities—which has also been called “intrusion upon
seclusion.”
       {¶ 33} “Intrusion upon seclusion” is based on the “right to be left alone.”
People for Ethical Treatment of Animals v. Bobby Berosini, Ltd., 111 Nev. 615,
630, 895 P.2d 1269 (1995). It is “akin to trespass in that it involves intrusion or
prying into the plaintiff’s private affairs.” Killilea v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 27
Ohio App.3d 163, 166, 499 N.E.2d 1291 (10th Dist.1985).                “ ‘One who
intentionally intrudes, physically or otherwise, upon the solitude or seclusion of
another or his private affairs or concerns, is subject to liability to the other for
invasion of his privacy, if the intrusion would be highly offensive to a reasonable
person.’ ” Sustin v. Fee, 69 Ohio St.2d 143, 145, 431 N.E.2d 992 (1982), quoting
Restatement of the Law 2d, Torts, Section 652B (1977). Whether an invasion of
privacy has occurred turns on the particular facts of the case. See Kane v. Quigley,
1 Ohio St.2d 1, 3-4, 203 N.E.2d 338 (1964). However, the right to privacy is not
absolute. Earp, 16 Mich.App. at 276, 167 N.W.2d 841.
       {¶ 34} When considering a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim
upon which relief can be granted, a court construes all factual allegations in the
complaint as true, Mitchell, 40 Ohio St.3d at 192, 532 N.E.2d 753, and can grant
the motion when it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts
entitling him to recovery, O’Brien, 42 Ohio St.2d at 245, 327 N.E.2d 753. In order
for appellees to have properly survived appellants’ motions to dismiss, appellees’
complaint must have demonstrated (1) that there was an intrusion by appellants into
a matter (2) that appellees had a right to keep private and (3) that the method of the
intrusion would be considered highly offensive to a reasonable person. Sustin, 69
Ohio St.2d at 145, 431 N.E.2d 992.




                                         13
                             SUPREME COURT OF OHIO




        {¶ 35} In Skinner v. Ry. Labor Executives’ Assn., 489 U.S. 602, 626-627,
109 S.Ct. 1402, 103 L.Ed.2d 639 (1989), the United States Supreme Court
recognized that urine tests are not invasive of the body, but “procedures for
collecting the necessary samples, which require employees to perform an excretory
function traditionally shielded by great privacy, raise concerns.” And in cases in
which the collection of the sample to be tested “involve visual or aural monitoring
of the act of urination,” privacy interests are implicated. Id. at 617.
        {¶ 36} While we recognize that workplace drug-testing policies implicate
employees’ privacy interests, we find as a matter of law that the facts alleged in
appellees’ complaint cannot sustain their common-law invasion-of-privacy claim.
Despite their assertions that they did not consent to drug testing using the direct-
observation method, the facts in the complaint demonstrate appellees did consent
to the use of the direct-observation method.
        {¶ 37} Consent is generally an absolute defense to an invasion-of-privacy
claim. See Restatement of the Law 3d, Employment, Section 7.06, comment h
(2015), citing Restatement of the Law 2d, Torts, Section 892A(1) (1979) (“One
who effectively consents to conduct of another intended to invade his interests
cannot recover in an action of tort for the conduct or for harm resulting from it”);
see also Baugh v. CBS, Inc., 828 F.Supp. 745, 757 (N.D.Cal. 1993). An employee
who consents to drug testing cannot claim that the testing was highly offensive and
invaded his or her right to privacy. Luedtke v. Nabors Alaska Drilling, Inc., 768
P.2d 1123, 1137-1138 (Alaska 1989) (employee could not validly complain that
drug testing was “highly offensive” when he voluntarily supplied urine sample);
Jennings v. Minco Technology Labs, Inc., 765 S.W.2d 497, 500 (Tex.Civ.App.
1989) (drug testing is not a tortious invasion of privacy when employee consents to
testing).
        {¶ 38} Sterilite’s substance-abuse policy was premised on the employees’
consent, which is “the central element of the right of privacy and its attendant public




                                          14
                                January Term, 2020




policy: the individual’s exclusive right to determine the occasion, extent, and
conditions under which [the individual] will disclose his [or her] private affairs to
others.” Jennings at 502.
       {¶ 39} Appellees argue that appellants have read the consent form too
expansively. The consent form is limited by its plain language. As written, the
form covers the testing of appellees’ urine for the presence of drugs and authorizes
U.S. Healthworks to release those results to Sterilite. But, the limitation of the
language of the consent form, which does not include that the direct-observation
method will be used, does not change the outcome here.
       {¶ 40} However, when appellees individually reported for the collection of
their urine samples, they were advised by the same-sex monitor that the direct-
observation method would be used.           At that time appellees had a second
opportunity—consent or refuse—and appellees consented by their action.
       {¶ 41} Lunsford and Griffiths produced valid urine samples. Keim and
Williamson alleged that they made “good faith efforts” to produce valid samples.
Their choice of the words “good faith efforts” establishes that they did not refuse
to provide a urine sample, but consented and were unable to produce a urine sample
within the time frame of the policy. Appellees’ consent to take the test by the direct-
observation method was therefore not borne by their actions in executing the
consent form, but by their actions in taking the test under the direct-observation
method. “Consent is the willingness in fact for the conduct to occur. It may be
manifested by action.” Restatement of the Law 2d, Torts, Section 892 (1979).
       {¶ 42} Appellees argue that their production of valid urine samples or
“good faith efforts” to produce valid urine samples were not voluntary because their
refusal would have been grounds for immediate termination. A fundamental
principle of Ohio’s employment-at-will doctrine is that any party to an
employment-at-will relationship may terminate the relationship for “any reason
which is not contrary to law.” Mers, 19 Ohio St.3d 100 at 103, 483 N.E.2d 150.




                                          15
                             SUPREME COURT OF OHIO




And Sterlite had the right to condition employment on consent to drug testing under
the direct-observation method, appellees had the right to refuse to submit to the
direct-observation method, and because appellees were at-will employees, Sterilite
had the right to terminate their employment for their failure to submit. Because
Sterilite had the legal right to terminate appellees’ employment at any time,
appellees’ argument that their consent was involuntary because of their fear of
termination necessarily fails.
       {¶ 43} When reviewing a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim,
courts construe all factual allegations in the complaint as true and should grant the
motion when it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no facts entitling
him to recovery. We are required to accept as true the factual allegations in the
complaint, but we are not required to accept legal conclusions alleged in the
complaint. See Mitchell, 40 Ohio St.3d at 193, 532 N.E.2d 753. Appellees can
prove no set of facts entitling them to recovery. On the face of the complaint,
appellees consented, without objection, to the collection of their urine samples
under the direct-observation method. See Stein v. Davidson Hotel Co., Tenn. App.
No. 01-A-01-9509-CV-00407, 1996 WL 230196, *9 (May 8, 1996), aff’d on other
grounds, 945 S.W.2d 714 (Tenn.1997) (affirming trial court’s grant of employer’s
motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim for invasion of privacy because
plaintiff’s complaint contained “no allegations that the [plaintiff] objected to the
test when asked to sign the [consent and release] form or when selected for the
test.”). The trial court correctly granted appellants’ motion to dismiss appellees’
invasion-of-privacy claim for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be
granted.
                                 CONCLUSION
       {¶ 44} When an at-will employee consents, without objection, to the
collection of the employee’s urine sample under the direct-observation method, the
at-will employee has no cause of action for common-law invasion of privacy.




                                         16
                                January Term, 2020




Therefore, we reverse the judgment of the Fifth District and reinstate the judgment
of the trial court.
                                                                  Judgment reversed.
        FRENCH, FISCHER, and DEWINE, JJ., concur.
        STEWART, J., dissents, with an opinion joined by O’CONNOR, C.J., and
DONNELLY, J.
                                _________________
        STEWART, J., dissenting.
        {¶ 45} Appellant Sterilite of Ohio, L.L.C., ordered appellees, Donna L.
Lunsford, Adam Keim, Laura Williamson, and Peter D. Griffiths, to each produce
a urine sample while a monitor employed by appellant U.S. Healthworks Medical
Group of Ohio, Inc., the administrator of Sterilite’s workplace drug-testing
program, directly observed appellees’ genitalia or else appellees would be
terminated. Appellees claimed in their complaint that this “direct-observation
method” of supervising the production of a urine sample violated their right to
privacy.
        {¶ 46} The majority opinion rejects appellees’ invasion-of-privacy cause of
action on the grounds that appellees had consented to the use of the direct-
observation method by either producing or trying to produce their urine samples
while being directly observed and that appellees did not submit to direct
observation under duress because they were at-will employees that Sterilite could
have terminated at any time.
        {¶ 47} Whether appellees have an invasion-of-privacy cause of action
against appellants has nothing to do with their status as at-will employees. An at-
will-employment relationship does not allow an employer to commit intentional
torts against its employees. And appellees’ complaint stated sufficient facts to show
that Sterilite coerced appellees to submit to the humiliation of having their genitalia
directly observed as each of them produced or attempted to produce a urine sample.




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Because I find that appellees’ complaint states a claim for invasion of privacy
sufficient to defeat a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim
upon which relief can be granted, I dissent.
                                 Invasion of Privacy
       {¶ 48} To be clear, appellees did not object to being drug tested by Sterilite.
Rather, their invasion-of-privacy claim is based on Sterilite’s drug-testing
procedure, which required them to expose their genitalia to a stranger while they
provided or attempted to provide their urine samples. This procedure, they allege,
is so humiliating to a person of normal sensibilities as to constitute an invasion of
privacy.
       {¶ 49} Invasion of the right to privacy is part of the “dignitary” torts—
actions that inflict an injury upon one’s reputation or honor. Although the earliest
cases alleging invasion of privacy premised relief upon some form of physical
trespass, “later commentators shared the view that an insult to dignity necessitated
a remedy in tort to vindicate the attack on the inner self.” Makdisi, Genetic Privacy:
New Intrusion a New Tort?, 34 Creighton L.Rev. 965, 980-981 (2001). Thus, the
tort of invasion of privacy protects a person’s interest in “personal dignity and self-
respect.” Harper & McNeely, A Re-Examination of the Basis for Liability for
Emotional Distress, 1938 Wis.L.Rev. 426, 451 (1938).
       {¶ 50} We long ago embraced the personal-dignity aspect of the right to
privacy. For example, in Housh v. Peth, 165 Ohio St. 35, 133 N.E.2d 340 (1956),
paragraph two of the syllabus, we recognized that among those actions amounting
to an invasion of privacy are “wrongful intrusion[s] into one’s private activities in
such a manner as to outrage or cause mental suffering, shame or humiliation to a
person of ordinary sensibilities.” We characterized the tort as a “salutary and
progressive principle of law.” Id. at 39.
       {¶ 51} In private-sector employment, random drug testing through urine
testing infringes upon an employee’s right to privacy in at least two ways: the




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collection of the urine sample itself and the intrusion into areas of the employee’s
private life that would otherwise remain unknown to the employer. See Skinner v.
Ry. Labor Executives’ Assn., 489 U.S. 602, 616-617, 109 S.Ct. 1402, 103 L.Ed.2d
639 (1989); Borse v. Piece Goods Shop, Inc., 963 F.2d 611, 622-623 (3d Cir.1992);
Baggs v. Eagle-Picher Industries, Inc., 957 F.2d 268, 274 (6th Cir.1991). We
should thus determine the degree of an employer’s harm to an employee’s right to
privacy by evaluating the employee’s subjective expectation of privacy and
whether it is objectively reasonable, the offensiveness of the invasion, the
legitimacy of the reason behind the policy, and the existence of reasonable, less
invasive alternatives.   Fisk, Privacy, Power, and Humiliation at Work: Re-
Examining Appearance Regulation as an Invasion of Privacy, 66 La.L.Rev. 1111,
1126-1127 (2006). In other words, the individual’s legitimate expectation of
privacy must be balanced against the employer’s need to conduct drug testing in
the manner it chooses.
       {¶ 52} Sterilite’s use of the direct-observation method to collect appellees’
urine samples was a highly intrusive invasion into a matter that appellees had a
right to keep private. “ ‘There are few activities in our society more personal or
private than the passing of urine. Most people describe it by euphemisms if they
talk about it at all.    It is a function traditionally performed without public
observation; indeed, its performance in public is generally prohibited by law as well
as social custom.’ ” Skinner at 617, quoting Treasury Emps. Union v. Von Raab,
816 F.2d 170, 175 (5th Cir.1987). The United States Supreme Court has concluded
that urination is “ ‘an excretory function traditionally shielded by great privacy.’ ”
Bd. of Edn. of Indep. School Dist. No. 92 of Pottawatomie Cty. v. Earls, 536 U.S.
822, 832, 122 S.Ct. 2559, 153 L.Ed.2d 735 (2002), quoting Skinner at 626. The act
of urination is one of the “few * * * times where individuals insist * * * strongly
and universally that they be let alone to act in private.” Lovvorn v. Chattanooga,
846 F.2d 1539, 1543 (6th Cir.1988). See also Capua v. Plainfield, 643 F.Supp.




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1507, 1513 (D.N.J.1986) (urine “is normally discharged and disposed of under
circumstances that merit protection from arbitrary interference”); Folmsbee v. Tech
Tool Grinding & Supply, Inc., 417 Mass. 388, 393, 630 N.E.2d 586 (1994) (“The
act of urination is inherently private”).
       {¶ 53} The direct observation by a stranger of a person’s genitalia while the
person urinates goes against societal norms that dictate a high level of privacy in
that function. As alleged by appellees, they were “required to bare his or her
genitalia in the presence of the U.S. Healthworks monitor and to endeavor to
produce a urine specimen while such monitor kept his or her eyes fixed on the
employee’s groin area.” Sterilite has offered no reasonable justification for using
the direct-observation method for urine collection over less intrusive means,
including the procedure it had used previously, which did not involve direct
observation of the employee’s genitalia. Appellees had provided urine samples for
drug testing in the past without being forced to expose their genitalia to a stranger.
They also alleged that they had not given “[Sterilite] any reason to believe or
suspect that [they] would attempt to compromise the integrity of the specimen
collection process used by or for [Sterilite] in administering its drug screening
program at any time in the past.”
       {¶ 54} Sterilite argues in its merit brief that more stringent monitoring
procedures are required to defeat the efforts of some employees who might evade
providing a urine sample or attempt to falsify a urinalysis result. But there is no
basis for Sterilite’s assertion that it needed to use a highly intrusive method of
monitoring its employees when the employees provided urine samples.
       {¶ 55} Methods of collecting urine samples that are less intrusive than the
direct-observation method plainly exist.         According to appellees’ complaint,
Sterilite had not used the direct-observation method for drug testing prior to
October 2016. Moreover, the United States Department of Transportation uses the
direct-observation method only if (1) a urine sample is determined by the laboratory




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to be invalid without an adequate medical explanation for the result, the original
positive, adulterated, or substituted result had to be cancelled because the split
sample could not be tested, or the sample was reported to be negative because it
was too dilute but its creatinine concentration was within a particular range; (2) the
test is a return-to-duty test or a follow-up test; or (3) the employee was observed to
be “clearly” trying to tamper with the urine sample or the original sample was out
of the acceptable temperature range or appeared to have been tampered with. See
49 C.F.R. 40.67(a) through (c). These federal regulations show that employers are
justified in using the highly intrusive direct-observation method if there is some
reason to believe that an employee will tamper or has tampered with the urine
sample.   But that did not occur here.          And although these regulations were
promulgated to govern the drug testing of public-sector employees, they provide
legitimate justifications supporting the limited use of the direct-observation method
across employment sectors.
       {¶ 56} The reasonableness of Sterilite’s decision to use the direct-
observation method is thus a factual question that is not amenable to resolution
through the granting of a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss. I would conclude that
appellees have presented facts in their complaint supporting their claim of invasion
of privacy. They have a legitimate expectation of privacy when urinating, and
direct observation by a stranger while doing so is highly intrusive. There were less
intrusive ways for Sterilite to ensure that appellees’ urine samples and the results
of their drug tests were not the products of tampering. Whether Sterilite had a
legitimate reason to use the direct-observation method is a question that goes
beyond the allegations in the complaint.
                                At-Will Employment
       {¶ 57} The at-will-employment doctrine does not diminish an at-will
employee’s expectation of privacy in this context.         At-will employment is a
relationship in which either the employer or the employee can terminate the




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employment relationship for any cause or no cause. Collins v. Rizkana, 73 Ohio
St.3d 65, 67-68, 652 N.E.2d 653 (1995). An at-will-employment relationship does
not implicate an employee’s right to privacy and certainly does not mean that the
appellees here had a reduced expectation of privacy because of their employment
status.
          {¶ 58} To be clear, this case is not about an employer’s right to discharge
an at-will employee. Nor is this case about an employer’s right to require drug
testing as a condition of employment—appellees do not dispute that Sterilite could
require them to submit to drug testing. Rather, this case is about how Sterilite
conducted its workplace drug-testing program and whether its use of the direct-
observation method of urine collection constituted an invasion of appellees’ right
to privacy. Whether an employee has been hired on an at-will basis has no effect
on the employee’s claim that the employer violated his or her right to privacy.
          {¶ 59} At best, appellees understood that as at-will employees they could
be terminated at any time and for any reason. But they could have had no
understanding that their status as at-will employees would require them to provide
a urine sample while a stranger directly observed their genitalia. And appellees’
complaint makes it clear that appellees Keim and Williamson were not terminated
based on their status as at-will employees or the at-will-employment doctrine.
Appellees Lunsford and Griffiths each produced a urine sample and were not
terminated. Keim and Williamson alleged that they had tried to provide a urine
sample but were unable to do so, and they were terminated under Sterilite’s
substance-abuse policy that considered an employee’s failure to provide a urine
sample within a specified period of time a “refusal to undergo a drug test.”
          {¶ 60} Even if the at-will-employment doctrine applied to the facts of this
case, an at-will employee cannot be terminated for a reason that is contrary to public
policy. Collins, 73 Ohio St.3d at 67-68, 652 N.E.2d 653; House v. Iacovelli, ___




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Ohio St.3d ___, 2020-Ohio-435, ___ N.E.3d ___, ¶ 11, citing Greeley v. Miami
Valley Maintenance Contrs., Inc., 49 Ohio St.3d 228, 234, 551 N.E.2d 981 (1990).
       {¶ 61} When we defined the common-law tort of invasion of privacy, we
declared that Ohio’s clear public policy prohibits the violation of a person’s right
to privacy by the wrongful intrusion of private actors. See Housh, 165 Ohio St. 35,
133 N.E.2d 340. “[I]n a common-law system, a judicial decision declaring the
rights of the parties can be based on several grounds, one of which is public policy.”
Zivich v. Mentor Soccer Club, Inc., 82 Ohio St.3d 367, 371, 696 N.E.2d 201 (1998),
fn. 4, citing Hopkins, Public Policy and the Formation of a Rule of Law, 37
Brooklyn L.Rev. 323, 330 (1971). See also Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago & St.
Louis Ry. Co. v. Kinney, 95 Ohio St. 64, 68, 115 N.E. 505 (1916) (“Sometimes such
public policy is declared by Constitution; sometimes by statute; sometimes by
judicial decision”).
       {¶ 62} It follows that the at-will-employment doctrine does not supersede
an employee’s right to obtain redress for the violation of his or her privacy rights.
                                      Consent
       {¶ 63} The majority opinion also concludes that regardless of any analysis
based on appellees’ right to privacy and the at-will-employment doctrine, appellees
each consented to providing a urine sample while being directly observed by
Sterilite’s representative “by their actions” in providing, or attempting to provide,
the sample. Majority opinion at ¶ 41. As a broad principle regarding whether a
person consented to an act or acted under duress, we have explained that the “real
and ultimate fact to be determined in every case is whether the party affected really
had a choice; whether he had his freedom of exercising his will.” Tallmadge v.
Robinson, 158 Ohio St. 333, 340, 109 N.E.2d 496 (1952). See also In re Hua, 62
Ohio St.2d 227, 232, 405 N.E.2d 255 (1980). Consent is generally an absolute
defense to an intentional tort, see Restatement of the Law 2d, Torts, Section 892
(1979), and like most defenses, its merit depends on the facts alleged. For this




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reason, the defense of consent is usually not amenable to resolution by a Civ.R.
12(B)(6) motion to dismiss.
         {¶ 64} Appellants and the majority opinion are disingenuous in stating that
appellees consented to providing their urine samples under the direct-observation
method. There was no direct consent here to the use of the direct-observation
method. The consent form that Sterilite required appellees to sign immediately
before they provided or attempted to provide their urine samples said nothing about
their having to provide the sample while a monitor directly observed their genitalia.
And Sterilite did not inform appellees that they would be subject to direct
observation until after they reported to provide their samples and after they had
signed the consent form.1
         {¶ 65} With no direct consent by appellees, the question is whether
appellees impliedly consented to the use of the direct-observation method by their
actions; that is, whether their actions of submitting or attempting to submit their
urine samples while being directly observed constituted consent.
         {¶ 66} Appellees had no time to make considered decisions on whether to
submit to drug testing under the direct-observation method. Sterilite’s substance-
abuse policy stated that “[a]ny employee who refuses to undergo a drug/alcohol test
will be subject to immediate termination.” At the time appellees were required to
provide their urine samples, they were presented with two choices: either provide a
urine sample under the direct-observation method or be terminated. It would strain
the meaning of the word “consent” to suggest that appellees consented under the
circumstances in this case.




1. Of course, there would be no issue regarding consent if Sterilite’s drug-testing policy involved
notifying its new employees at the time of their hiring that its policy included the use of the direct-
observation method for collecting urine samples. Similarly, when Sterilite decided to institute the
use of the direct-observation method, it could have simply notified its employees of the new
procedure that it had added to its drug-testing protocol.




                                                  24
                                January Term, 2020




       {¶ 67} Under similar facts, a federal district court determined that an
employer’s policy requiring its employees to either take a drug test or be terminated
was “tantamount to no choice at all” and that the plaintiff-employee in that case did
not waive his right to challenge the employer’s drug-testing policy by submitting
to a drug test.    Doyon v. Home Depot U.S.A., Inc., 850 F.Supp. 125, 130
(D.Conn.1994).    And in Polsky v. Radio Shack, 666 F.2d 824, 825-827 (3d
Cir.1981), an employee alleged that her former employer had unlawfully
discharged her based on the results of a polygraph test conducted in violation of a
Pennsylvania statute prohibiting an employer from requiring an employee to submit
to a polygraph examination “as a condition for employment or continuation of
employment,” despite that the employee had signed a release prior to taking the
test. On the question whether the employee had consented to take the test, the Third
Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the district court’s grant of summary judgment
to the employer, holding that an issue of material fact existed as to whether the
employee “signed the release under threat of losing her job if she did not.” Id. at
827. See also Leibowitz v. H.A. Winston Co., 342 Pa.Super. 456, 463-465, 493
A.2d 111 (1985) (consent not valid if given under compulsion).
       {¶ 68} Under the facts alleged by appellees in their complaint, what
happened to them was not much different from being an unwilling participant in a
shotgun wedding. Appellees alleged that they were “forced” to expose their
genitals to third-party observers. Taking this allegation as true for the purposes of
a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss, Maitland v. Ford Motor Co., 103 Ohio St.3d
463, 2004-Ohio-5717, 816 N.E.2d 1061, ¶ 11, whether appellees’ alleged implied
consent to testing under the direct-observation method was the product of their
legitimate fear that they would be terminated is a question of fact outside the scope
of a Civ.R. 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss. For the majority to hold as a matter of law
that appellees consented to having their genitalia observed while they gave, or
attempted to give, a urine specimen is to subvert Civ.R. 12(B)(6).




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       {¶ 69} Neither of the other-state cases that the majority cites supports its
conclusion that an employee’s consent to drug testing precludes the employee from
arguing that the testing procedure was “highly offensive,” because the employees
in those cases had not been ambushed at the restroom door and given the ultimatum
to provide their urine samples under direct observation of their genitalia or else lose
their jobs. In Luedtke v. Nabors Alaska Drilling, Inc., 768 P.2d 1123, 1126, 1137
(Alaska 1989), the employees had failed to show that the manner of drug testing
was unreasonable and complained only about the purpose of the testing. And in
Jennings    v.   Minco    Technology     Labs,     Inc.,   765   S.W.2d    497,    498
(Tex.Civ.App.1989), the employee challenged the implementation of a drug-testing
policy after the employee had been hired. And that policy contained “various
safeguards for accuracy, confidentiality, and modesty.” (Emphasis added.) Id.
       {¶ 70} In contrast to those cases and as noted above, the employees here are
not challenging the drug-testing policy itself—they are challenging the highly-
offensive manner in which it took place without prior warning that the direct-
observation would be used. This distinction is important when the scope of an
employee’s consent has been distorted, as the majority has done here, to encompass
implied consent without the employee’s having a reasonable choice or there being
limitations on the testing procedure. At what point would the majority hold that an
employer has exceeded the scope of an employee’s implied consent in the context
of an employee’s providing a urine sample? What indignities must an at-will
employee suffer to avoid losing his or her income and benefits before the employee
has a cause of action for invasion of privacy? Make no mistake, the majority’s
decision today will disproportionately affect workers who have no meaningful
choice and no recourse for their employers’ intentional torts.
       {¶ 71} For these reasons, I respectfully dissent from the majority’s decision
to reverse the judgment of the court of appeals.
       O’CONNOR, C.J., and DONNELLY, J., concur in the foregoing opinion.




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                               _________________
       Law Offices of S. David Worhatch and S. David Worhatch, for appellees.
       Brennan, Manna & Diamond, L.L.C., John N. Childs, and Daniel J. Rudary,
for appellant Sterilite of Ohio, L.L.C.
       Weston Hurd, L.L.P., Daniel A. Richards, and Joshua Miklowski, for
appellant U.S. Healthworks Medical Group of Ohio, Inc.
       Bolek Besser Glesius, L.L.C., and Matthew D. Besser, urging affirmance
for amicus curiae, Ohio Employment Lawyers Association.
                               _________________




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