MATTHEW F. LEITMAN, District Judge.
This is a civil action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Plaintiff Maria McCormack ("Plaintiff") has asserted claims against the City of Westland, the Wayne Westland Fire Association, Highland Landscape and Snowplowing, and a number of individually-named defendants (collectively, the "Defendants"). Plaintiff alleges that the Defendants unlawfully entered onto her real property and then took and/or damaged her personal property. (See Am. Compl., ECF #32.)
On October 17, 2017, the parties participated in a settlement conference conducted by the Court. (See Oct. 17, 2017 Conf. Tr., ECF #66.) At the conclusion of the conference, the parties reached an agreement to settle the case, and they placed that agreement on the record. (See id.) Counsel for the parties then proceeded to memorialize the agreement in two formal written settlement agreements — one between Plaintiff and the Westland Defendants
As a result, the Westland Defendants have filed a motion to enforce the October 17, 2017, settlement. (See ECF #76.) Likewise, the Highland Landscaping Defendants have filed a motion to enforce the October 17, 2017, settlement. (See ECF #77.) In response, Plaintiff has filed her own motion in which she asks the Court to hold at least certain terms of the settlement unenforceable. (See ECF #78.) For the reasons explained below, the Court
Plaintiff lives in the City of Westland, Michigan. She does not get along with her next door neighbors, the Meads. Due in part to her conflict with them, she hung tarps along the fence that separates her yard from theirs. Thereafter, certain employees of the City of Westland and of Highland Landscape & Snowplowing entered onto Plaintiff's property without a warrant and removed some of the tarps.
On December 31, 2015, Plaintiff filed this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. She alleges, among other things, that the Defendants violated her rights under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments. (See Compl., ECF #1; Am. Compl., ECF #32.) Following substantial discovery, Plaintiff moved for summary judgment on her claim that the Defendants violated her rights under the Fourth Amendment. (See ECF #40.) In an Order dated August 10, 2017, the Court granted summary judgment in favor of Plaintiff (on liability only) against a number of the Defendants. (See ECF #60.)
On October 17, 2017, the Court held a settlement conference in this action. Plaintiff attended along with her retained counsel. Representatives of the Defendants also attended with retained counsel.
The Court began the conference by confirming with the parties that they wished to have the Court (as opposed to some other judicial officer or private mediator) conduct the settlement conference. (See Oct. 17, 2017 Conf. Tr. at 5-7, ECF #66 at Pg. ID 871-73.) The Court then described its "judicial approach" to settlement. (Id. at 8, Pg. ID 874.) The Court explained that it would meet separately with each side, during which it would provide a "neutral detached person's view" of the case and "share with [each side] the reasons I think you should settle." (Id.) The Court obtained each party's consent to the settlement process it described. (See id. at 6-7, 9-10, Pg. ID 872-73, 875-76.)
The Court also explained to the parties that, in its experience, settlements are achieved when both sides are unhappy with at least some aspects of the agreement:
(Id. at 9, Pg. ID 875.)
The Court then met with each side and their lawyers in separate rooms. The conversations were at times stressful and animated. But with hard work and careful consideration, the parties reached an agreement after several hours of negotiations. The parties then reconvened on the record. The Court recited the material terms of the agreement reached by the parties on the record:
After the Court announced these terms on the record, it had the following exchange with Plaintiff and her attorney, Elizabeth Downey:
(Id. at 15, Pg. ID 881; emphasis added.) Defense counsel then also confirmed that the terms announced by the Court were accurate and were agreed upon. (See id. at 15-19, Pg. ID 881-85.)
Counsel for the Westland Defendants and counsel for the Highland Landscaping Defendants then both stated on the record that, in order for Plaintiff to receive settlement payments, Plaintiff would need to complete an I.R.S. Form W-9. (See id. at 17-20, Pg. ID 883-86.) Plaintiff's counsel agreed to have Plaintiff provide the W-9. (See id. at 17, Pg. ID 883.) The Court then explained to Plaintiff that a completed W-9 form would be "required from you." (Id. at 18, Pg. ID 884.) The Court next confirmed with Plaintiff that she understood that a W-9 "is a form that you fill out and it includes name, address, and Social Security number, among other things" and that the form "is a standard part of . . . tax paperwork" that is used "to generate [an I.R.S. Form] 1099." (Id.)
Finally, the Court asked Plaintiff if she had any concerns with the settlement process or the terms of the settlement:
(Id. at 21, Pg. ID 887.) Plaintiff replied by thanking the Court for its efforts and acknowledging that, as the Court predicted at the beginning of the conference, she was "unhappy" with aspects of the agreed-upon settlement:
(Id. at 21-22, Pg. ID 887-88.)
After Plaintiff voiced her "only concern," the Court confirmed with Plaintiff that, notwithstanding the concern, she was entering into the agreement "voluntarily and willingly":
(Id. at 22, Pg. ID 888; emphasis added.)
Following the conference, the parties attempted to reduce their agreement to writing. But Plaintiff began raising concerns about the proposed drafts, and she would not sign. At the request of counsel, the Court convened a status conference to address the issues in dispute and to assist the parties in memorializing their agreement.
At the conference, Plaintiff raised three primary concerns about the terms of the agreement. First, she raised a concern about the height of the fence to be installed between her yard and her neighbors' yard. The parties had not specifically addressed the height of the fence when they placed the settlement on the record in October, but they did agree at that time that the Court would resolve any disputes concerning the installation of the fence. (See id. at 13, Pg. ID 879.) Consistent with that agreement, the Court determined that the height of the fence would be 78 inches. (See Dec. 18, 2017 Conf. Tr. at 24, ECF #80 at Pg. ID 1036.)
Second, Plaintiff raised a concern about the length of the fence. The Court ruled that the new fence could come at least as far forward as the current (to be replaced) fence between Plaintiff's yard and her neighbors' yard. (See id. at 32, Pg. ID 1044.) Plaintiff's counsel confirmed that this placement of the fence would be "within the spirit of the settlement." (Id.)
Third, Plaintiff objected to completing a W-9 form. (See id. at 33, Pg. ID 1045.) Plaintiff explained that she objected to providing a W-9 form "because of privacy." (Id. at 34, Pg. ID 1046.) The Court addressed this concern by persuading Defendants to agree not to disclose any of the information included on Plaintiff's W-9 form except as required by law. (See id. at 37-38, Pg. ID 1049-50.)
At the conclusion of the status conference, Plaintiff complained that the earlier settlement conference had been coercive. The Court then asked Plaintiff's counsel if she felt the same way, and counsel said she did not:
(Id. at 47, Pg. ID 1059.)
Following the status conference, counsel for the Defendants sent to Plaintiff's counsel revised agreements reflecting the modifications ordered by the Court during the conference. Plaintiff's counsel was satisfied that the revised agreements accurately captured the original settlement as clarified by the Court during the conference, but Plaintiff nonetheless refused to sign the revised agreements. Plaintiff's refusal to sign and other related conduct led to a breakdown in her relationship with Plaintiff's counsel, and Plaintiff's counsel moved to withdraw from representing Plaintiff. (See Mot. to Withdraw, ECF #67.)
In the motion to withdraw, Plaintiff's counsel explained that Plaintiff "refuses to cooperate . . . in executing and complying with the settlement to which she agreed on October 17, 2017." (Id. at Pg. ID 891.) Counsel added that she was attempting "to take all reasonable actions to finalize the settlement put on the record on October 17, 2017 and clarified on the record on December 18, 2017," but "Plaintiff made it clear that her objective is the opposite." (Id., Pg. ID 895.) Counsel noted that "[Plaintiff] has declined to cooperate in any action necessary to complete the settlement, and has asked counsel to take certain actions that conflict with her duty as an officer of the court in this respect." (Id.) The Court granted the motion to withdraw in an Order dated January 18, 2018. (See ECF #70.)
On May 31, 2018, the Westland Defendants filed a motion to enforce the October 17, 2017, settlement. (See ECF #76.) The Westland Defendants ask the Court to "order the Plaintiff to execute necessary documents, the W-9 and the Settlement Agreement within seven (7) days of the Court's expected Order." (Id. at Pg. ID 942.) Also on May 31, 2018, the Highland Landscape Defendants filed a motion to enforce the October 17, 2017, settlement. (See ECF #77.) The Highland Landscape Defendants ask the Court to order Plaintiff to "execute and return the agreement [previously agreed to by her counsel] within seven (7) days of the order being issued." (Id. at Pg. ID 970.)
On June 4, 2018, Plaintiff filed a motion asking the Court to "deem[]" that part of the settlement agreements, specifically "the issue over the fence and W-9 form," are "unenforceable." (ECF #78 at Pg. ID 1003.) Plaintiff states that she refuses to sign the agreements because she disagrees with terms that she previously consented to on the record at the settlement conference. (See Pl.s' Mot., ECF #78.) Plaintiff states there are "two main issues in dispute": "i) construction of a fence for a party [her neighbor] with no standing and ii) filling out a W-9 [to the City of Westland before it pays her the settlement funds]." (Id. at Pg. ID 991.) Plaintiff argues that the "installation of a fence for a non or third-party is impermissible by law" and that "the issue of the W-9 form was obtained by fraud, coerced by non-disclosure. . . ." (Id. at Pg. ID 1002.) Plaintiff also alleges that there were other instances of coercion, undue influence, and bias during the October 17, 2017, settlement conference. (See id. at Pg. ID 1001-02.)
On June 25, 2018, Plaintiff filed a response and objection to the Westland Defendants' motion to enforce the settlement. (See ECF #81.) In addition to restating the argument in her motion, Plaintiff contends that the settlement agreement was ambiguous and therefore there was no meeting of the minds. Plaintiff argues that the Court's ruling on the parties' dispute over the privacy fence at the December 18, 2017, status conference shows that the October 17, 2017, agreement was ambiguous. (See id. at Pg. ID 1071-74, 1076-78.)
The Clerk of the Court received Plaintiff's response to the Highland Landscaping Defendants' motion to enforce the settlement (see ECF #89) on July 27, 2018 — four days after the Court's deadline for Plaintiff to respond. (See ECF #82.) Plaintiff's response to the Highland Landscaping Defendants' motion to enforce the settlement largely "incorporates [arguments she advanced in] her previous pleadings," i.e., in her own motion seeking to render parts of the settlement unenforceable and in her response to the Westland Defendants' motion to enforce the settlement. (Resp. to Highland Landscaping Defs.' Mot., ECF #89 at Pg. ID 1138-39.) Plaintiff also contends that she did not knowingly settle her claims against the Highland Landscaping Defendants. (See id. at Pg. ID 1144.)
"It is well established that courts retain the inherent power to enforce agreements entered into in settlement of litigation pending before them." Bamerilease Capital Corp. v. Nearburg, 958 F.2d 150, 152 (6th Cir. 1992) (internal quotations omitted). "A federal court possesses this power even if that agreement has not been reduced to writing." Brock v. Scheuner Corp., 841 F.2d 151, 154 (6th Cir. 1988) (internal quotations omitted).
"Before enforcing settlement, the district court must conclude that agreement has been reached on all material terms." Id. "Whether a settlement agreement is a valid contract between the parties is determined by reference to state substantive law governing contracts generally." Bamerilease Capital Corp., 958 F.2d at 152 (internal alterations omitted). The parties appear to agree that Michigan law would govern the validity of the settlement agreement. Under Michigan law, "[i]n order to form a valid contract, there must be a meeting of the minds on all the material facts. A meeting of the minds is judged by an objective standard, looking to the express words of the parties and their visible acts, not their subjective states of mind." Kamalnath v. Mercy Mem'l Hosp. Corp., 487 N.W.2d 499, 503 (Mich. Ct. App. 1992). But even if there is a meeting of the minds, an agreement will not be enforced if it resulted from "fraud or mutual mistake," Brown v. Cty. Of Genessee, 872 F.2d 169, 174 (6th Cir. 1989), from "unconscionable advantage," Plamondon v. Plamondon, 583 N.W.2d 245, 246 (Mich. Ct. App. 1998), or from coercion or duress. See Norton v. State Hwy. Dept., 24 N.W.2d 132, 135-36 (Mich. 1946).
The Court concludes that the parties formed a valid contract at the October 17, 2017, settlement conference. The material terms of the agreement, including the City of Westland's construction of the neighbors' fence, the payments to Plaintiff, the release of claims by Plaintiff, the appointment of City of Westland officials to serve as contact point for Plaintiff, and the requirement that Plaintiff complete a Form W-9, were identified on the record at the hearing. Plaintiff, while represented by experienced and highly-effective counsel, expressly agreed to those terms.
Contrary to Plaintiff's argument, the fact that the Court made some specific determinations about the height and placement of the fence during the December 18, 2017, status conference, does not demonstrate that the October 17, 2017, agreement was ambiguous or incomplete. At the October conference, the parties agreed upon the material term that the City would install the fence, and the parties further agreed that if they could not reach an agreement upon the specific characteristics of the fence, then the Court would make the final call in that regard. Thus, at the October 17, 2017, conference, the parties reached a clear and definite agreement concerning how disputes over the nature of the fence would be resolved, and the Court followed through on that agreement when it resolved the fence-related disputes at the December 18, 2017, status conference. Notably, while Plaintiff may feel that the October 17, 2017, agreement was unenforceable on the ground that it was incomplete or ambiguous, her experienced former attorney does not share that view.
Finally, the Court is certain that Plaintiff was not coerced into agreeing to the terms placed on the record and equally certain that her agreement to those terms was not the product of duress. "Duress, under the modern formulation, is present when a person, by the unlawful act of another, is induced to make a contract under circumstances that deprive him of free will," Stefanac v. Cranbrook Educ. Cmty., 458 N.W.2d 56, 74 n.40 (Mich. 1990) (citing Norton, supra), and coercion is the "application to another of such force, either physical or moral, as to constrain him to do against his will something he would not otherwise have done." Norton, 24 N.W.2d at 135. Neither duress nor coercion were present in this case. Indeed, Plaintiff expressly confirmed on the record at the very end of the October 17, 2017, conference that she was "voluntarily and willingly going ahead with the settlement as we have announced it today." (Oct. 17, 2017 Conf. Tr. at 22, ECF #66 at Pg. ID 888; emphasis added.) Likewise, Plaintiff's former counsel, who was by Plaintiff's side for every minute of the settlement conference, confirmed that the conference was "typical" and not tainted by coercion or duress. (Dec. 18, 2017 Conf. Tr. at 47, ECF #80 at Pg. ID 1059.)
In sum, Plaintiff's refusal to sign the settlement agreements is based upon a garden-variety case of buyer's remorse, not upon some legally-valid objection to the terms of the agreements or to the settlement process itself. Therefore, the Court will require Plaintiff to take the steps necessary to execute the settlement.
The circumstances of this case are strikingly similar to the circumstances in McCormick v. Brezezinski, 2010 WL 1463176 (E.D. Mich. Apr. 13, 2010). In that case, the parties reached a settlement agreement and orally placed the material terms of the agreement on the record. McCormick, 2010 WL 1463176 at *1. The parties agreed to reduce those terms to writing and to include in the final settlement agreement certain unspecified "standard language." Id. at *3. The parties further agreed that if there was a dispute about particular "standard language" to be included, the court would determine whether to include the language in the final written agreement. Id.
A dispute arose during the drafting process, and the plaintiff
First, the plaintiff objected to provisions in the written agreement that classified the settlement payment as "damages" for tax purposes and allowed the defendants to issue an IRS Form 1099 to the plaintiff. The plaintiff refused to provide her social security number to be included on the Form 1099. See id. The plaintiff argued that the provisions were "new and different terms." Id. The court rejected that argument. The court noted that the parties agreed that it (the court) would resolve disputes concerning standard language to be included in the agreement, and the court determined that the disputed tax provisions were "entirely standard language." Id. The court also directed the plaintiff to provide the defendants with her social security number because "sending a Form 1099 including [the plaintiff's] social security number is required under Federal Law." Id. Similarly, the requirement that Plaintiff here complete a W-9 is a reasonable and standard term to which Plaintiff voluntarily consented and which will enable the Defendants to comply with their obligation under federal law to issue a Form 1099 to Plaintiff.
Second, the plaintiff in McCormick argued that she was under duress when she agreed to the settlement. The court rejected that argument. See id. at *4. Noting that it had "personally conducted and recorded the settlement conference," the court concluded that "[t]here exists no evidence indicating that [the plaintiff] was coerced." Id. at *5. Rather, the court noted, "[p]laintiff was, in fact, entirely free to turn down the proposed terms of the settlement agreement or to walk away from the discussion at any time and proceed to trial." Id. Likewise, in this case, the Court personally conducted the settlement agreement and concludes — based upon its personal involvement in the process as well as Plaintiff's statements to the Court on the record at the conclusion of the settlement conference — that Plaintiff did not agree to the settlement terms as a result of duress or undue pressure.
Finally, the plaintiff in McCormick claimed that she was misled into believing that the defendant county, rather than an insurance carrier, was making the payment due under the settlement agreement. See id. The court rejected this argument because it found that the defendant did not make any material misrepresentation concerning the source of the funds paid to the plaintiff. See id. Here, there is no evidence that any term of the agreement was misrepresented to Plaintiff.
As in McCormick, the Court concludes that Plaintiff was fully informed of the material terms of the agreements and voluntarily assented to be bound by those terms. Thus, Plaintiff must sign the settlement agreements that reflect those terms.
The Court wishes to clarify which version of the written settlement agreement between the Westland Defendants and Plaintiff must be executed. The Westland Defendants attached as an exhibit to their motion a written settlement agreement that reflects the terms placed on the record at the October settlement conference (the "October Version"). (See ECF #76-2.) The October Version does not reflect the rulings by the Court related to the settlement terms at the December status conference. Plaintiff, in contrast, submitted a different version of the written agreement that reflects both the terms placed on the record at the October settlement conference and the rulings by the Court at the December status conference (the "December Version"). (See ECF #81 at Pg. ID 1087-89.) The Westland Defendants state that they seek an order compelling Plaintiff to sign the October Version, rather than the December Version, because, during the December 18, 2017, status conference, Plaintiff "did not agree to amend" the terms placed on the record in October. (Resp. to Pl.s' Obj., ECF #84 at Pg. ID 1102.)
The Court concludes that Plaintiff must execute the December Version. Contrary to the Westland Defendants' suggestion, the December Version is not an amendment of the terms placed on the record in October and did not require Plaintiff's additional assent. On the contrary, the December Version simply finalizes and carries into effect the parties' original October agreement — an agreement that expressly contemplated that the Court would resolve the disputes addressed in December.
Finally, the Court addresses Plaintiff's contention that she was "unaware of any settlement with Highland until on the record." (Resp. to Highland Landscaping Defs.' Mot., ECF #89 at Pg. ID 1144.) Plaintiff contends that there was no mention of the Highland Landscaping Defendants during the settlement discussions that led up to the placement of the agreement on the record. The Court knows from its personal involvement in the settlement discussions that the Highland Landscaping Defendants were mentioned during those discussions. Just as importantly, even if the Highland Landscaping Defendants were not mentioned during the discussions (and they were), those Defendants were clearly identified as being included in the settlement agreement when the agreement was placed on the record, and Plaintiff raised no objection to their inclusion in the settlement agreement. (See Oct. 17, 2017 Conf. Tr. at 13-14, ECF #66 at Pg. ID 879-80.) On the contrary, she agreed to settle with them. (See id. at 22, Pg. ID 888.) The Court is certain that Plaintiff knowingly agreed to settle with the Highland Landscaping Defendants.
For all the reasons stated above,