TERESA J. JAMES, Magistrate Judge.
This matter is pending before the Court on Defendant SC Realty Services, Inc.'s Motion to Strike Jury Demand (ECF No. 10). Pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 39(a)(2), Defendant requests that the Court strike Plaintiff's jury demand based upon a contractual jury trial waiver in Plaintiff's Employment Agreement with Defendant. Plaintiff opposes the motion, arguing that the waiver is not enforceable, because it did not survive termination of the Employment Agreement. As explained below, the Court finds Plaintiff knowingly and voluntarily waived her right to a trial by jury, the jury waiver applies to all three claims asserted by Plaintiff in this case, and the waiver is enforceable after termination of the Employment Agreement. The motion is granted.
Plaintiff and her husband, Gary Walker, sold their commercial cleaning business to Defendant on October 1, 2014. As part of the asset purchase agreement, Plaintiff was to work for Defendant. Plaintiff and Defendant negotiated the terms of the purchase for more than three months and Plaintiff signed an Employment Agreement, effective October 1, 2014. Plaintiff was represented by an attorney during negotiation of the purchase and specifically negotiation of the Employment Agreement. The final version of the Employment Agreement included the following jury trial waiver provision, which was inserted in lieu of an arbitration provision:
In January 2015, Defendant terminated Plaintiff's employment. Plaintiff alleges that Defendant unlawfully terminated her employment due to her complaints of sex discrimination and harassment. Defendant claims that it lawfully terminated Plaintiff's employment for cause under the Employment Agreement.
On December 24, 2015, Plaintiff filed her Complaint asserting claims for (1) sex discrimination and harassment under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, (2) retaliation under Title VII, and (3) breach of the Employment Agreement. In her Complaint, Plaintiff demanded a trial by jury on all counts. Defendant then filed this motion to strike Plaintiff's demand for trial by jury, arguing that Plaintiff waived her right to jury trial in this case under the terms of the Employment Agreement.
Defendant argues Plaintiff's demand for a jury trial should be stricken because Plaintiff knowingly and intentionally waived her right to a jury trial pursuant to the express terms of her Employment Agreement. Defendant contends the jury trial waiver provision governs disputes following the termination of Plaintiff's employment and applies to all Plaintiff's claims, including her discrimination and retaliation claims.
Plaintiff argues jury waiver clauses are disfavored and courts indulge every reasonable presumption against waiver because the right to a jury trial in a civil case is a fundamental right guaranteed by the Seventh Amendment to the Constitution. Plaintiff contends that the jury waiver expired when the Employment Agreement was terminated. According to Plaintiff, the jury trial waiver is not enforceable because it expired upon termination of her employment with Defendant and the Employment Agreement does not contain a "survival clause" explicitly stating that the jury waiver survives beyond the termination of the Employment Agreement.
"The right of jury trial in civil cases at common law is a basic and fundamental feature of our system of federal jurisprudence which is protected by the Seventh Amendment."
In cases filed in federal courts, this right to a jury trial is governed by federal law.
Parties may contractually waive the right to trial by jury and in the Tenth Circuit "[a]greements waiving the right to trial by jury are neither illegal nor contrary to public policy."
The Tenth Circuit has not directly determined which party has the burden of proving the knowing and voluntary nature of the waiver.
Plaintiff does not dispute the jury trial waiver was knowing and voluntary. But as Defendant bears the burden, the Court has analyzed and considered whether Defendant has shown Plaintiff's waiver was knowing and voluntary under the five factors typically analyzed by courts.
First, as Defendant points out, the jury waiver clause was conspicuous in the Employment Agreement as it was located in its own paragraph, was printed in the same font size as the rest of the Employment Agreement (not a smaller font), and was clearly labeled "
Second, the Court finds no evidence of a gross disparity in the bargaining power of the Plaintiff and Defendant. Plaintiff and her husband operated their commercial cleaning business for over twenty years before selling essentially all of the business assets to Defendant for $1.34 million. The asset purchase agreement, as well as the Employment Agreement executed by Plaintiff and Defendant were the result of over three months of negotiation. Plaintiff rejected Defendant's proposed arbitration clause and Defendant ultimately agreed to remove the clause. This suggests little disparity in the bargaining power between the parties. Plaintiff makes no argument to the contrary.
The third factor is the business or professional experience of the party opposing the waiver. Plaintiff's operation of a commercial cleaning business for over twenty years supports the conclusion that Plaintiff had sufficient business and professional experience to understand the jury waiver clause. Again, Plaintiff does not contend otherwise.
With regard to the fourth factor, Defendant argues, and Plaintiff does not dispute, that the Employment Agreement was the product of negotiations between the parties for more than three months over the sale of Plaintiff's business assets to Defendant, during which Plaintiff was represented by legal counsel. As part of the parties' negotiation of the agreement, Plaintiff rejected Defendant's proposed arbitration provision and proposed a "Dispute Resolution" clause requiring that "any judicial proceedings arising out of or relating to the[e] Agreement" would be filed in Johnson County, Kansas district court or federal district court in Kansas. After approximately a month of negotiations, Defendant agreed to remove the arbitration clause and Plaintiff agreed to the addition of a jury waiver provision. Thus, the parties clearly had an opportunity to negotiate the terms of the Employment Agreement, including specifically the jury waiver provision.
The Court therefore finds, after weighing the factors, that Defendant has met its burden of showing Plaintiff's waiver of her right to a jury trial, as set forth in the Employment Agreement, was made knowingly and voluntarily.
The Court next addresses the scope of the jury trial waiver to determine whether the waiver applies to all the claims asserted by Plaintiff in this case. Defendant argues that when Plaintiff entered into the Employment Agreement, she waived her right to a jury trial for claims arising out of, related to, or connected with her employment contract or her employment at SC Realty. Defendant argues that all three of the Plaintiff's claims—sex discrimination in violation of Title VII, retaliation in violation of Title VII, and breach of contract—arise directly out of her employment with Defendant, and therefore Plaintiff waived a jury trial with respect to all three claims under the Employment Agreement.
Under Section 12.12 of the Employment Agreement, the parties agreed to waive their right to a trial by jury in "any action involving, directly or indirectly, any matter (whether sounding in tort, contract, or otherwise) in any way arising out of, related to, or connected with this Agreement or any ancillary agreement or the relationship established hereunder or thereunder." The Court agrees with Defendant that this language includes Plaintiff's claims "arising out of, related to, or connected with" the Agreement or her employment relationship established with Defendant under the Employment Agreement. The Court notes that at least two courts have held that a plaintiff's waiver of her right to jury trial in an employment contract also applied to the plaintiff's claims arising under federal and state discrimination statutes.
Under the plain language of the jury waiver at issue here, the Court concludes that the waiver applies to Plaintiff's claim for breach of the Employment Agreement, as well as her Title VII sex discrimination and harassment, and retaliation claims. All three claims arise out of, relate to, or are connected with the Employment Agreement or Plaintiff's employment relationship with Defendant, as established by the Employment Agreement.
Plaintiff contends the jury trial waiver provision is not enforceable because the waiver did not survive termination of the Employment Agreement. Preliminarily, Defendant disputes Plaintiff's assertion that the terms of the Employment Agreement have "expired" or "terminated." While admitting Plaintiff is no longer its employee, Defendant claims that she is still subject to various post-employment obligations under her Employment Agreement. For example, Plaintiff agreed that, during her employment and for a period of three years following the cessation of her employment, she would not solicit or divert business, engage in any cleaning service or similar or related business, or solicit Defendant's employees.
Defendant's argument on this point places form over substance. The heading to section 10 of the Employment Agreement reads: "
The Court finds, pursuant to Section 10 of the Employment Agreement, when Defendant terminated Plaintiff's employment, the Employment Agreement terminated as well. The fact, as Defendant notes, certain obligations expressly continued under the terms of the Employment Agreement after its termination does not alter the fact that the agreement terminated.
Defendant alternatively argues that the jury trial waiver is a continuing obligation that survives termination of the Employment Agreement. It argues that the jury waiver provision applies without limitation and without regard to when such a claim related to Plaintiff's employment is initiated. Defendant contends any argument that the parties did "not" intend the dispute resolution provisions in the Employment Agreement, including the jury trial waiver provision, to govern all disputes relating to the Employment Agreement and Plaintiff's employment strains credibility. Under Plaintiff's theory, Defendant contends this Court would be required to accept the nonsensical proposition that the parties intended for the dispute resolution provisions in the Employment Agreement to apply only to disputes not significant enough to warrant termination of Plaintiff's employment.
Neither party cites a case which addresses the specific question presented here. That is, whether a knowing and voluntary jury trial waiver provision in an employment contract is enforceable after termination of the employment contract. Independent research by the Court likewise revealed no authority addressing this precise issue.
Defendant urges the Court to adopt the reasoning of the courts that have found "[d]ispute resolution provisions presumptively survive termination of a contract."
Plaintiff cites two cases in support of her argument that the jury waiver provision did not survive termination of the Employment Agreement.
The Court turns then to consideration of the Employment Agreement itself. "The primary rule for interpreting written contracts is to ascertain the parties' intent. If the terms of the contract are clear, the intent of the parties is to be determined from the language of the contract without applying rules of construction."
In this case, however, it is not clear from the jury waiver provision of the Employment Agreement whether the parties intended for the waiver to apply to claims brought after the agreement was terminated. Accordingly, the Court applies rules of construction to determine the intent of the parties to the contract.
As the Kansas Supreme Court noted in Foltz v. Struxness,
Stated simply, "[t]he policy under Kansas law `is to permit mentally competent parties to arrange their own contracts and fashion their own remedies.'"
The Court has already determined that the subject jury waiver in the Employment Contract was entered into knowingly and voluntarily. The Court further finds the jury trial waiver is very broad in scope. It expressly extends to "any action involving, directly or indirectly, any matter (whether sounding in tort, contract, or otherwise) in any way arising out of, related to, or connected with [the] Agreement or any ancillary agreement or the relationship established hereunder or thereunder."
This conclusion is bolstered by the fact that this jury waiver provision was inserted in the Employment Agreement during negotiations in lieu of a broad arbitration provision which expressly applied, among other things, to the specific types of wrongful termination claims that Plaintiff now alleges. The Court finds that the broad language of the jury waiver provision shows the parties intended it also to extend to such wrongful termination claims, just as the arbitration provision it replaced. Finally, the Court's conclusion is supported by the fact that Plaintiff makes no argument the parties intended—at the time the Employment Agreement was negotiated and executed—that the jury waiver would not apply to employment-related claims brought after termination of the agreement.
The Court therefore finds that Plaintiff knowingly and voluntarily waived her right to a jury trial, the waiver provision applies to all three claims asserted by Plaintiff in this case, and the waiver is enforceable after termination of the Employment Agreement. Plaintiff has therefore waived her right to a trial by jury, and her jury trial demand must be stricken.
IT IS SO ORDERED.