DENISE COTE, District Judge.
Plaintiff David Wiggins ("Wiggins") brings this action against his former employer, Hain Pure Protein Corporation ("HPPC"), for breach of contract and violation of the New York Labor Law. Wiggins was fired in April of 2009 and seeks payment of a 2008 bonus, severance pay, rights in an equity plan, and payment for unused vacation. Following the close of discovery, HPPC filed a motion for summary judgment on May 27, 2011. For the following reasons, HPPC's motion for summary judgment is granted.
The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise indicated. Prior to the time period at issue here, Wiggins was retained as a consultant by Pegasus Capital Advisors, L.P. ("Pegasus"), a private equity
Upon HPPC's formation, Wiggins was named chairman of the HPPC Board, but continued to serve as a consultant to Pegasus on HPPC and other ventures. During this time, Wiggins billed the time he spent on HPPC matters to Pegasus. Wiggins claims that Pegasus then billed HPPC for his services to the joint venture. Simon, on the other hand, claims that Pegasus was only reimbursed by HPPC for Wiggins's expenses, and that HPPC Board members' time was not charged to HPPC.
On March 4, 2008, Wiggins made a presentation to the HPPC Board during a meeting in Minneola, New York, about the acquisition of Pilgrim's Pride. The HPPC Board approved the acquisition, and appointed Wiggins the CEO of HPPC. Wiggins did not make any mention at the HPPC Board meeting that he wanted HPPC to agree to a one-year severance payment in the event of his discharge as CEO.
Wiggins does not have an employment contract reduced to writing, but he did discuss his requests about compensation with certain HPPC Board members. On March 4, prior to the HPPC Board meeting, Wiggins met with Cohen, then a member of the HPPC Board; Cunningham, who was not yet a member of the HPPC Board; and Shaun Collyer ("Collyer"), a Pegasus employee also not on the HPPC Board. In this meeting, Wiggins relayed his request that he be compensated by HPPC no less than what he was receiving from Pegasus as a consultant, as well as for a one-year severance payment. Cohen and Cunningham let him know he would need approval from the HPPC Board for these requests. Wiggins claims that Cohen and Cunningham informed him that they supported his request for a severance payment, but they do not recall telling him this. Cunningham testified that the HPPC Board did not approve Wiggins's request for a severance payment.
After the March 4 HPPC Board meeting, Wiggins met one-on-one with Simon. Wiggins claims that during their conversation, Simon agreed to his request for a one-year severance payment. Simon, on the other hand, testified that he does not recall discussing a severance payment with Wiggins.
Wiggins does not have any documentation that he was granted a one-year severance payment during his employment at HPPC. Nor was he ever told that there was a HPPC Board meeting at which his severance payment request was approved. Cunningham testified only that he had conversations with Lamel and Simon agreeing to Wiggins's salary amount and that the HPPC Board also agreed that he should be given an opportunity to receive a bonus, based on the performance of the business and at the discretion of the HPPC Board.
Between March and July 2008, Wiggins began serving as the CEO of HPPC, but continued to be paid by Pegasus until July 1, when Wiggins completed an employment
Sometime after the acquisition of Pilgrim's Pride, Wiggins discussed putting into place a management equity plan at HPPC with Cunningham, Cohen and Collyer. In April 2008, Cunningham was involved in discussions about a possible HPPC management equity plan with other HPPC Board members. On August 13, Wiggins sent Cunningham an email asking about the status of the development of a management equity plan. Cunningham responded by email the next day that he was still trying to get such a plan approved by the HPPC Board. Wiggins admits that he does not know if HPPC ever adopted an equity plan, and that no one ever told him that the HPPC Board had agreed to such a plan.
On September 8, 2008, Wiggins emailed Lamel and Cunningham a proposal for fiscal year 2008 bonuses for HPPC employees. This proposed bonus chart did not list any 2008 bonus for Wiggins, although his name and salary is listed alongside other HPPC employees. The minutes from the September 10 HPPC Board meeting indicate that Collyer was directed to finalize the employee 2008 bonuses with Lamel and Cunningham.
Wiggins stated that he discussed his own 2008 bonus with Cunningham, and that he agreed that a $100,000 bonus, as suggested by Wiggins, was an appropriate amount. But Wiggins was never informed if his 2008 bonus was ever discussed at a HPPC Board meeting.
On February 19, 2009, Wiggins signed a memo regarding HPPC's employee vacation policy. This policy states that unused vacation would only be paid out to those that voluntarily left the company.
Wiggins was fired from HPPC by Cunningham on April 21, 2009 after the HPPC Board discussed and agreed that he should be removed. This was not unexpected. HPPC was performing "fairly significant[ly]" "under budget" in the first few months of 2009.
Following his discharge, Wiggins spoke with both Cohen and Cunningham in separate conversations about getting a severance payment. He also corresponded by email with Cohen and Cunningham in May and June 2009 about a severance payment. In emails of July and August 2009, Cunningham informed Wiggins that he had to meet with the HPPC Board to get a consensus on the severance payment, but never let Wiggins know the result of those meetings. Cohen also never told Wiggins that there was an agreement from the HPPC Board about a severance payment. Cunningham testified that the HPPC Board discussed Wiggins's request for a severance, but that the directors determined that HPPC had no further obligations to Wiggins.
HPPC argues that it is entitled to summary judgment because the undisputed facts show that there was no contract formed between it and Wiggins establishing that Wiggins had a right to a 2008 bonus, a one-year severance payment, participation in a management equity plan, or payment for unused vacation (the "Denied Benefits"). Furthermore, HPPC argues that because Wiggins worked primarily in Pennsylvania for a company organized under the laws of Delaware and operating principally in Pennsylvania, he is not entitled to bring claims under the New York Labor Law. Because Wiggins has not raised any genuine disputes of material fact to support the formation of a contract with HPPC to provide him the Denied Benefits, HPPC's motion for summary judgment is granted.
A motion for summary judgment may not be granted unless all of the submissions
HPPC argues that it is entitled to summary judgment against Wiggins's breach of contract claims because the undisputed evidence shows there was no contract regarding the Denied Benefits. "Under New York law, a breach of contract claim requires proof of (1) an agreement, (2) adequate performance by the plaintiff, (3) breach by the defendant, and (4) damages."
Tractebel Energy Marketing, Inc. v. AEP Power Marketing, Inc., 487 F.3d 89, 95 (2d Cir.2007) (citation omitted).
Minelli Const. Co., Inc. v. Volmar Const., Inc., 82 A.D.3d 720, 721, 917 N.Y.S.2d 687 (N.Y.App.Div.2011) (citation omitted).
Under Delaware law,
The undisputed evidence shows that there was never any contract by which HPPC bound itself to provide Wiggins any of the Denied Benefits. While Wiggins asserts that he had conversations with directors regarding each of the Denied Benefits, other than unused vacation, there is no any evidence supporting an inference that the HPPC Board assented to grant him these Denied Benefits, and there is evidence that the HPPC Board came to an explicit decision to reject his requests for a severance payment and participation in a management equity plan. The lack of assent by the HPPC Board with respect to each Denied Benefit will be analyzed more below.
Wiggins correctly contends that HPPC could have committed to provide the Denied Benefits to him by oral agreement, thereby creating a binding contract. In the absence of a written contract, a court evaluates whether the parties agreed to be bound by an oral agreement by considering
Powell v. Omnicom, 497 F.3d 124, 129 (2d Cir.2007). In the case of the Denied Benefits, only the third factor need to be considered — not only is there no evidence that all of the terms have been agreed upon, there is no evidence that there was an agreement by HPPC on any of the terms of the Denied Benefits. In other words, HPPC did not just fail to agree to be bound by oral agreement — it did not reach any agreement with regard to the Denied Benefits. Therefore, while HPPC could have reached an oral agreement to provide Wiggins with the Denied Benefits, there is no evidence of any agreement at all — oral or written.
It is undisputed that there is no documentation reflecting a request by Wiggins for a severance payment prior to his discharge, and that the HPPC Board never voted on or agreed at a board meeting to a one-year severance payment to Wiggins in the event of his discharge. Cunningham testified that the HPPC Board approved Wiggins's salary and that he would be given the opportunity to receive a bonus, but that it never approved a severance payment. In urging that summary judgment should be denied on his claim that HPPC breached its agreement to provide him a severance payment, Wiggins relies on his contention that he received the consent of Cohen, Cunningham and Simon for his severance payment request. Cohen, Cunningham, and Simon dispute this characterization. But even assuming that they did, their expressions of support do not bind HPPC.
Int'l Boiler Works Co. v. Gen. Waterworks Corp., 372 A.2d 176, 177 (Del.1977) (citation omitted). Indeed, "[a]pparent authority exists when a principal, either intentionally or by lack of ordinary care, induces a third party to believe that an individual has been authorized to act on its behalf." Highland Capital Mgm't LP v. Schneider, 607 F.3d 322, 328 (2d Cir. 2010) (citation omitted); Stichting Ter Behartiging Van de Belangen Van Oudaandeelhouders In Het Kapitaal Van Saybolt Int'l B.V. v. Schreiber, 407 F.3d 34, 56 (2d Cir.2005) ("A principal may be bound by the actions of an agent on the basis of apparent authority only where it is shown that a third party ... reasonably relied upon the misrepresentation of the agent because of some misleading conduct on the part of the principal.") (citation omitted).
Wiggins makes no argument that HPPC, the principal that Wiggins seeks to hold liable, acted in some way to induce him to believe that one or all of Cohen, Cunningham or Simon could make an agreement on behalf of the company without acting through the HPPC Board.
Wiggins makes much of the fact that the HPPC Board did not always issue written board resolutions or record minutes of its meetings, but this does not support his
The undisputed evidence, including Wiggins's own testimony, shows that the HPPC Board never agreed to a 2008 bonus for Wiggins. The fact that the HPPC Board agreed that he should be given the opportunity to receive a bonus based on the company's performance and at the discretion of the HPPC Board is not an agreement to give Wiggins a specific bonus. Nor is the fact that the HPPC Board referred to a plan Wiggins drafted with recommendations for HPPC employee 2008 bonuses helpful to him, as this plan did not include a bonus amount for Wiggins himself.
Wiggins claims that he discussed a 2008 bonus for himself with Cunningham, and that Cunningham agreed that a roughly $100,000 bonus was appropriate. Even if this is true, it fails to demonstrate an agreement between Wiggins and HPPC on his 2008 bonus. For the same reasons already mentioned, Cunningham did not serve as an agent able to bind HPPC to an agreement to provide Wiggins with a 2008 bonus. The other HPPC Board members testified that they don't recall approving such a bonus, and even Wiggins testified that he was never informed that his 2008 bonus was discussed at a HPPC Board meeting, much less approved. Nor is there any evidence that Wiggins inquired of any board member about the status of his 2008 bonus payment between September 2008 and May 2010, when the complaint in this action was filed.
Wiggins claims that the HPPC Board members gave inconsistent testimony about his 2008 bonus. This is not true — each stated that he could not recall any approval for a 2008 bonus for Wiggins. The lone contrary testimony is from Collyer, a former Pegasus employee who was never a board member and whose testimony contradicts that of Wiggins himself.
There is also no genuine dispute of material fact that a management equity plan was discussed by the HPPC Board but never implemented. Wiggins's own testimony that he does not know if the HPPC Board ever confirmed a management equity plan confirms the more detailed testimony by Cunningham that a management equity plan was discussed between April and August 2008, but was never approved due to the declining performance of HPPC. The testimony from
No evidence has been presented to suggest that HPPC made any agreement with Wiggins or ever enacted a policy by which its employees would be entitled to a payment for unused vacation in the event that they were discharged involuntarily. In fact, the 2009 Memo bearing Wiggins's signature states that one who is fired, as he was, is not entitled to a payment for unused vacation. The declaration of Parmele confirms that this was the policy of HPPC.
Wiggins does not make any argument why HPPC's summary judgment motion should be denied as to his claim for payment for unused vacation other than his attempt to exclude the 2009 Memo from consideration. Even if the 2009 Memo were excluded, the remaining evidence would justify summary judgment. The 2008 Memo, upon which Wiggins would rather rely, is silent about payments regarding unused vacation. Parmele's declaration, which articulates the policy as that approved by Wiggins in the 2009 memo, would also still be in evidence. In the absence of any evidence of a policy that would grant Wiggins a payment for unused vacation after being involuntarily discharged, Wiggins cannot claim that there is a genuine dispute about the existence of such a policy at this stage.
Wiggins's complaint vaguely refers to various sections of the New York Labor Law ("NYLL") in bringing his second claim against HPPC.
Pursuant to § 191, certain kinds of employees can bring a claim for an employer's failure to pay their wages on a certain schedule. Under § 193, employees may have a claim against an employer's unlawful deductions from their wages. Section 198(1-a) allows plaintiffs who prevail under wage claims to recover, in addition to any underpayment of wages, attorney's fees, prejudgment interest and liquidated damages. The other sections of Article 6 either do not provide employees with a cause of action against an employer or provide for claims quite unrelated to Wiggins' allegations.
Wiggins has been no more specific about the nature of his NYLL claims in opposing this motion for summary judgment. It is incumbent on a plaintiff to give fair notice to a defendant of its claim, and for this reason alone HPPC would be entitled to summary judgment on any NYLL claim. But, there are additional grounds as well for granting summary judgment to HPPC.
Executives such as Wiggins are not entitled to bring claims under § 191 of the NYLL, as the statute specifically excludes them. Pachter v. Bernard
HPPC's May 27, 2011 motion for summary judgment is granted. The Clerk of Court will enter judgment for HPPC and close this action.