OWEN M. PANNER, District Judge.
This matter comes before the Court on Defendants' Motion to Enforce Settlement Agreement (#47) and Plaintiff's Motion for Leave to File an Amended Complaint (#45). Defendants' Motion is DENIED. Plaintiff's Motion is GRANTED.
This case arises out of a pair of mortgages on a cabin belonging to Plaintiff. In April 2014, the parties engaged in settlement negotiations. On April 21, 2014, Defendants' counsel sent Plaintiff's counsel an email proposing the "key, non-boilerplate terms" of a settlement agreement. On April 25, Plaintiff's counsel replied that his client had authorized him to accept the deal, but with the reservation that he needed to clarify the details of the credit reporting issue in the proposed settlement. Plaintiff's counsel then informed the Court that a settlement had been reached and the Court entered a Sixty-Day Order of Dismissal.
On April 29, Defendants' counsel sent Plaintiff's counsel a draft settlement agreement. Plaintiff's counsel was told not to have Plaintiff sign it yet because it had not met with final approval from the bank. On May 8 and again on May 9, Plaintiff's counsel sent proposed redline modifications to the April 29 draft. Several of these corrections dealt with the credit reporting issue. Defendants counsel responded with another draft that rejected or modified portions of the May 8 and May 9 drafts. The parties then exchanged drafts throughout June 2014 but were unable to reach a mutually agreeable draft of the settlement agreement.
A district court has the power to summarily enforce an agreement to settle a case pending before it.
Under Oregon law, the determination of whether a contract exists is a question of law.
The parties need only agree on the essential or material elements of the contract, not on every possible term.
In this case, Defendants contend that Plaintiff manifested his intent to enter into the contract in the April 25 email. The record shows, however, that Plaintiff's April 25 acceptance of the settlement terms was expressly conditioned upon clarification of the credit reporting issue as it related to a third party. Clarification of that term was at the heart of the subsequent draft proposals exchanged by the parties and it does not appear from the record that the issue was ever resolved. Based on the record, I conclude that the credit reporting issue was a material term upon which the parties never reached agreement. Summary enforcement is therefore inappropriate and Defendants' motion is DENIED.
Courts should freely give leave to amend pleadings when justice so requires. Fed. R. Civ. P. 15 (a) (2). Leave to amend is not automatic, however. Courts are directed to consider 1) bad faith, 2) undue delay, 3) prejudice to the opposing party, 4) futility of amendment, and 5) whether plaintiff has previously amended his complaint.
Defendants contend that no amendment of the complaint should be permitted because the parties reached an enforceable settlement agreement. Defendants make no other objection to Plaintiff's motion. As I have denied Defendants' Motion to Enforce Settlement Agreement, Plaintiff shall be permitted to amend the complaint. Plaintiffs' Motion is GRANTED.
Defendants' Motion to Enforce Settlement Agreement (#47) is DENIED. Plaintiff's Motion for Leave to File an Amended Complaint (#45) is GRANTED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.