MARK A. KEARNEY, District Judge.
In this case involving both legal and equitable defenses to an insurer employer enforcing a release against its insurance agents, the jury found eight of the first-filed ten agent-plaintiffs established their legal defenses of not knowingly and voluntarily signing their former employer's release. Judge Ronald L. Buckwalter then entered findings of fact and conclusions of law upholding the employer's equitable defenses. Following Judge Buckwalter's well-deserved retirement, Judge Gerard J. Pappert entered an Amended Judgment Order based on the jury's verdict on the agents' legal defenses and Judge Buckwalter's findings on the agents' equitable defenses. Plaintiffs then moved to amend both Judge Buckwalter's Findings and Judge Pappert's Amended Judgment Order. In the accompanying Order, we deny Plaintiffs' motion as to Judge Buckwalter's Findings and grant their motion as to one aspect of Judge Pappert's Amended Judgment Order to confirm counsel's agreement regarding the effect of the jury verdict on Plaintiffs' federal and state law claims remaining to be resolved along with the remaining agent-plaintiffs.
Judge Buckwalter presided over a jury trial on whether the first-filed ten of the over four hundred agent-plaintiffs knowingly and voluntarily signed a release of claims (the "Release") prepared by their former employer Defendant Allstate Insurance Company ("Allstate") when it terminated their employment contracts under its Preparing for the Future Group Reorganization Program (the "Program").
Aside from their legal defenses to the Release resolved by the jury, Plaintiffs posited two equitable Release defenses at trial: unclean hands and unconscionability. Judge Buckwalter addressed these equitable defenses in his Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law and a Judgment Order declining to invalidate the Release on grounds of either unclean hands or unconscionability. On February 10, 2016, following reassignment to Judge Gerald
Plaintiffs seek two amendments to Judge Buckwalter's Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law and one amendment to Judge Pappert's Amended Judgment Order under Fed.R.Civ.P. 52.
In reviewing Plaintiffs' unclean hands equitable defense, Judge Buckwalter commented:
Plaintiffs now argue the highlighted passage reflects an improper adjudication of a question not at issue in the trial.
We do not share Plaintiffs' concerns. Before and during trial, despite Allstate's objections, Plaintiffs asserted Allstate's reasons for implementing the Program and the cost-savings it would enjoy were relevant to their unclean hands defense. Plaintiffs vehemently opposed Allstate's efforts to exclude evidence regarding their rationale for implementing the Program and Release, arguing "[i]n order to present the jury with a complete picture of how Allstate structured the Program, Plaintiffs must be able to present evidence of the creation and design of the Program around the Release, why it developed the Program around the Release and its internal materials and analysis relating to the development of the Program `options.'"
Following trial, Judge Buckwalter addressed whether Allstate's alleged efforts to insulate itself from significant liability for conduct it purportedly knew to be unlawful rendered the Release unenforceable under the unclean hands doctrine. Judge Buckwalter recognized, in contrast to Plaintiffs' abundant evidence of the oppressive and unscrupulous intent behind the Program and Release, Allstate offered similarly significant evidence of designing the Program as a valid, cost-saving measure, which it partially implemented through a Release satisfying the statutory elements of the Older Workers Benefit Protection Act ("OWBPA").
But we also recognize Plaintiffs' concern with the potential future impact of the statement "the Program and Release were business-related decisions that fully complied with federal statutory law and which made an effort to effectuate valid cost-savings measures."
Plaintiffs argue the Court's conclusion on procedural unconscionability is inconsistent with the jury's verdict. The jury determined eight of the ten Trial Plaintiffs did not knowingly and voluntarily sign the Release. Judge Buckwalter then issued Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law holding "[h]aving considered all of the testimony and evidence at trial, . . . Plaintiffs have [not] met their burden of proving that the Release was procedurally unconscionable, even as to those Plaintiffs deemed by the jury to have not signed the Release knowingly and voluntarily."
The Plaintiffs' request lacks merit. The questions decided by the jury did not constrain the Court's procedural unconscionability finding. Under the Seventh Amendment, "[w]hen litigation involves both legal and equitable claims, even if it is the plaintiff that joins such claims, the right to a jury trial on the legal claim, including all issues common to both claims, must be preserved by trying the legal claim to a jury first, or at least simultaneously with the equitable claim, and by accepting the jury's findings on common facts for all purposes."
Nothing in the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law contravenes these principles. At trial, the Court asked the jury to determine whether the Trial Plaintiffs signed the Release knowingly and voluntarily under the federal "totality of the circumstances" test. The Court instructed the jury on the meaning of both "knowingly" and voluntarily" and directed the jury of Allstate's burden of proving both elements.
By contrast, under the procedural unconscionability standard, Plaintiffs bore the burden of proving a lack of meaningful choice in light of all the circumstances surrounding the transaction.
Alternatively, Plaintiffs' argument constitutes an improper attempt to advance a new theory contrary to an earlier argument. In their Reply in support of their proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, Plaintiffs made precisely the opposite assertion: "[i]n deciding Plaintiffs' equitable defenses, the Court is not bound by the jury's verdict."
Finally, even assuming arguendo Plaintiffs are correct, any error is harmless and amending the judgment would have no effect on the Trial Plaintiffs. The jury found eight of the ten Trial Plaintiffs did not sign their Releases knowingly and voluntarily. As to those eight Plaintiffs, the Releases have been invalidated regardless of the Court's ruling on the unconscionability claim. As to the two non-prevailing Plaintiffs, the laws of their home states require them to show both procedural and substantive unconscionability to invalidate the Release.
Plaintiffs argue the February 16, 2016 Amended Judgment Order only renders the Release unenforceable as to the federal claims and does not reflect Allstate's trial stipulation admitting the Judgment also renders the Release unenforceable as to Prevailing Plaintiffs' state law claims.
Plaintiffs originally intended to adduce a duress defense at trial. Before trial, the parties agreed:
MR. GODFREY [counsel for Allstate]: For purposes of this trial only, I think Mr. Quinn has it correct. If we lose under the totality of the circumstances test and the jury says for a particular plaintiff, or all of them, that it was not knowing and voluntary, then the Release is no longer a valid defense to assert for any other claims that Mr. Quinn is pursuing with respect to these ten Plaintiffs.
I think we are on the same page.
Ultimately, the jury found the Prevailing Plaintiffs did not sign the Release knowingly and voluntarily. Under the Parties' agreement, the Release is rendered unenforceable as to all federal and state law claims raised by the Prevailing Plaintiffs.
Allstate now argues it agreed to this stipulation only to prevent unnecessary duplication in the jury instructions and verdict form, and not to waive its independent ratification defense by a jury verdict finding the. Prevailing Plaintiffs did not knowingly and voluntarily sign the Release. Allstate no.w argues simply because the Prevailing Plaintiffs did not knowingly and voluntarily sign the Release has nothing to do with ratification because the Release is only voidable not void.
The Court disagrees. We enforce counsels' agreement.
Holding Allstate at its word, we amend the February 10, 2016 Judgment Order to reflect the Release is no longer a valid defense to any of the federal or state law claims asserted by Prevailing Plaintiffs Boyd, Crease, Harper, Kearney, Kelly, Lawson, Peterson, or Reinerio.
We find no basis to amend Judge Buckwalter's Findings of Fact but remind counsel as to our inability to rely upon dicta. We also enforce the Parties' agreement as to the effect of the jury's verdict on the Trial Plaintiffs' federal and state claims. In the accompanying Order, we amend the February 10, 2016 Amended Judgment Order to reflect the Parties' agreement.