MARTIN C. CARLSON, Magistrate Judge.
Contractual disputes often entail divining the intent of the parties. In many instances this task reduces itself to an exercise in determining whether the parties genuinely failed to have a meeting of the minds, or whether one party, with the clarity of hindsight, simply wishes to escape what he now regards as an inconvenient promise.
So it is in this case. This matter comes before us on a motion to enforce a settlement agreement filed by the defendant. (Doc. 19.) Upon consideration of this motion, and after conducting a hearing in this matter, we conclude that an enforceable agreement does exist between these parties to settle this case for $7,000. While the plaintiff may now, in hindsight, experience buyer's remorse relating to the promise he made and conveyed through his counsel, those regrets do not justify allowing the plaintiff to ignore his promises simply because they are no longer convenient. Therefore, for the reasons set forth below, we recommend that the motion to enforce settlement agreement be granted.
This settlement dispute arises out of an employment discrimination case filed by the plaintiff, Boubacar Garba, against his former employer, Fresh Express, Inc. With respect to the question of whether the parties reached an enforceable agreement to settle this lawsuit, all counsel have submitted affidavits describing their settlement discussion. These affidavits are consistent and congruent with one another, and describe a commonplace course of settlement negotiations, negotiations that led to an agreed-upon resolution of this case. (Docs. 20-3, and 23.)
According to counsel, these settlement negotiations took place in May and June of 2014, following the plaintiff's May 20, 2014, deposition in this lawsuit. According to the plaintiff's counsel,
Attorney Bateman then took the lead in these settlement discussions. In the course of these negotiations, on June 12, 2014, Mr. Bateman and Garba had a telephone conversation in which Mr. Bateman sought confirming authorization to settle this case for $7,000, some $3,000 more than the settlement sum that the attorney believed Garba had previously authorized on June 4, 2014. According to Attorney Bateman at the close of this discussion he asked Garba for authorization to enter into a $7,000 settlement and Garba replied: "Ok Richard, whatever you think."
Having received what he believed to be this authority to settle this case for $7,000 counsel reached an agreement to settle this lawsuit for that sum. Plaintiff's counsel then communicated this settlement by voice-mail to Garba on June 12, 2014. When counsel did not hear back from Garba after a week had passed they placed follow-up calls to the plaintiff on June 19, 2014, and ultimately both of plaintiff's counsel spoke with Garba by telephone on June 20, 2014. According to Garba's two attorneys, by June 20, 2014, Garba reported to his attorneys that he now refused to accept the $7,000 settlement they had negotiated on his behalf because it was not enough money to compensate him for his damages.
In stark contrast to the straightforward factual narrative provided by his own counsel, Boubacar Garba initially provided the Court with an affidavit which set forth an inconsistent and contradictory account of these settlement negotiations. Thus, Garba acknowledged initially demanding $14,500 to settle this case in May 2014. (Doc. 23, Garba affidavit, ¶ 3.) Garba then conceded that his attorneys sought authorization to settle the case for a certain sum on June 4, 2014, and admitted that his lawyers believed that he had authorized a sum certain settlement of $4,000 or more. However, in his declaration Garba enigmatically stated that "I gave them authority to settle my case at that time for no less than a certain sum" without ever stating what that "certain sum" was. (
Given the inconsistences which riddled Garba's account of these events, as a matter of fairness to the plaintiff we scheduled a hearing in this matter on August 29, 2014, to allow Garba to testify and provide some clarity to the many contradictions in his prior affidavit. Having conducted this hearing, we find that Garba's account of these negotiations remains evasive, elusive, contradictory and inconsistent. Further, we find that Garba's claims that he did not authorize a settlement of this matter for $4,000 or $7,000 is contradicted by the great weight of the credible evidence in this matter, including admissions made by Garba before this Court.
In his hearing testimony, Garba addressed the one critical factual issue which he had evaded in his initial sworn declaration, the nature of his June 12, 2014, conversation with his own attorney, Richard Bateman. After some equivocation, Garba conceded that Attorney Bateman's description of this June 12, 2014, conversation-in which Attorney Bateman alleged that he asked Garba for authorization to enter into a $7,000 settlement and Garba replied: "Ok Richard, whatever you think"—was accurate. After making this significant concession, the balance of Garba's hearing testimony was a wholly unpersuasive fabric of explanations for his erratic conduct, explanations which failed legally, logically, linguistically and mathematically. Thus, at various times Garba suggested that he believed that his lawyers were describing $14,000 and $17,000 settlement figures when they actually stated $4,000 and $7,000. Garba then seemed to contradict this assertion by acknowledging that at times the lawyers spoke of $4,000 and $7,000 settlements. Garba tried to reconcile these inconsistences by then insisting that he believed these $4,000 and $7,000 sums were in addition to his initial $14,500 demand. However, Garba did not, and could not, explain how these additional sums could have added up to the $17,000 settlement sum which he claimed he understood that the defendants had offered him, since plainly they do not.
On these facts, we find that the defendant has carried its burden of proving the existence of an enforceable settlement agreement involving a $7,000 settlement, and Garba authorized such a settlement on June 12, 2014, during a conversation with Attorney Bateman. We further find that Garba's later objections to this settlement amount do not stem from a genuine misunderstanding or a failure of the parties to reach a meeting of the minds. Instead, it reflects a legally unenforceable human desire to avoid compliance with an inconvenient promise. Therefore, it is recommended that the motion to enforce be granted.
The legal principles which govern enforcement of settlement agreements are familiar and well-settled. At the outset, Fresh Express, Inc., "as the party seeking to enforce a purportedly valid settlement agreement, bears the burden of proving that [Garba] granted the authority to enter into the agreement to his attorney.
In deciding whether Fresh Express has carried this burden of proof and persuasion, we are reminded that "settlement agreements are essentially contracts to which the basic contract principles apply.
In sum:
Further, when deciding whether counsel had the authority to enter into a settlement agreement on behalf of a client, "it is `clear and well-settled that an attorney must have express authority in order to bind a client to a settlement agreement.'
Attorney Bateman then separately discussed this $7,000 settlement with Garba on June 12, 2014. As to this conversation, Bateman and Garba both acknowledged that Attorney Bateman's description of this conversation-in which Attorney Bateman alleged that he asked Garba for authorization to enter into a $7,000 settlement and Garba replied: "Ok Richard, whatever you think"— was accurate. This statement by Garba was, and reasonably could be construed as, an express authorization to settle the litigation for $7,000. Armed with this express authorization, the parties then entered into an oral, and enforceable, settlement agreement, which was reported to Garba in a telephone message by Attorney Bateman on June 12, 2014.
Eight days then elapsed without a response from Garba. This fact is strongly suggestive of buyer's remorse on Garba's part rather than any confusion regarding the terms of a settlement. Indeed, if Garba had not authorized a $7,000 settlement in his conversation with Attorney Bateman on June 12, 2014, one would have expected that he would have immediately contacted Bateman to object to that settlement when Bateman left a telephone message reporting the settlement later on the day of June 12, 2014. Instead, Garba took no action and expressed no opinion to his own counsel for more than a week until his two counsel were able to reach the plaintiff by telephone on June 20, 2014. At that time both of Garba's counsel reported that Garba's initial reason for rejection of this $7,000 settlement was consistent with buyer's remorse and a reluctance to follow through on an inconvenient promise previously made by the plaintiff. Thus, both counsel reported that Garba's initial, fundamental objection was that he refused to "accept the settlement because it was not enough money." (Doc. 23, affs. Dion and Bateman.)
In the face of this evidence, Garba has provided an account of events which is contradictory, and wholly unpersuasive. While Garba acknowledges that his lawyers were seeking authorization to settle for a sum certain, and admits that Attorney Bateman accurately described the content of their June 12, 2014, conversation in which Bateman received what can reasonably be construed as authorization to settle this litigation for $7,000, Garba implausibly claims that he never provided his counsel with any settlement figure which he would deem acceptable. This assertion is incredible and would require the Court to believe that experienced counsel engaged in weeks of settlement negotiations without any meaningful guidance or input from their client. In essence, we would have to accept that Garba successfully insisted that both his own lawyers and counsel for Fresh Express engage in some peculiar form of blind bidding, where they would simply propose various settlement terms to the plaintiff until Garba was ready to announce himself satisfied.
Settlement negotiations simply are not the type of Delphic bidding process Garba describes, where his own lawyers and opposing counsel are instructed to keep guessing regarding the terms of a settlement until the plaintiff pronounces himself pleased. The incredible nature of Garba's description of this process substantially undermines the plaintiff's credibility in this case. Garba's description of this settlement process is incredible in a number of other respects as well. For example, in his affidavit Garba claims to have initially authorized a $14,500 settlement, but later asserted that he would not settle this case for $20,000. Thus, if we are to believe Garba's own account, in the course of these negotiations the plaintiff authorized a settlement amount that he secretly knew he would later reject. This is a damning admission for the plaintiff since it is clear that Garba's "attorneys are not expected to be telepathists or even infallible interpreters of clients's verbalized communications. An attorney is, rather, expressly authorized to settle a client's case `if he is reasonable in drawing an inference that the [client] intended him so to act although that was not the [client's] intent.' Restatement (Second) of Agency § 7 cmt. b."
Instead, we find that Fresh Express has shown by clear and convincing evidence that the plaintiff authorized his counsel to settle this litigation for $4,000 and $7,000. We further find that, acting upon Garba's instructions, his counsel reached an enforceable agreement to settle this lawsuit for $7,000, and that Garba's subsequent repudiation of that agreement reflects Garba's belated, but legally unenforceable, desire to avoid compliance with an inconvenient promise. Therefore, it is recommended that the motion to enforce this settlement be granted.
For the reasons set forth above, it is RECOMMENDED that the Court GRANT the defendant's Motion to Enforce Settlement Agreement. (Doc. 19.)
The parties are further placed on notice that pursuant to Local Rule 72.3: