Mariotti v. Moore Business ( 1993 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    March 2, 1993 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________


    No. 92-1196

    FRANK B. ABBADESSA,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    MOORE BUSINESS FORMS, INC.,

    Defendant, Appellee.

    _____________________

    No. 92-1197

    ROBERT D. MARIOTTI,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    MOORE BUSINESS FORMS, INC.,

    Defendant, Appellee.

    ____________________

    APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE


    [Hon. Norman H. Stahl, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Selya, Circuit Judge,
    _____________
    Higginbotham,* Senior Circuit Judge,
    ____________________
    and Cyr, Circuit Judge.
    _____________
    ____________________






















    James H. Shulte with whom Burns, Bryant, Hinchey, Cox & Schulte,
    _______________ ________________________________________
    P.A. was on brief for appellants.
    ____
    Edward M. Kaplan with whom William D. Pa.ndolph and Sulloway
    _________________ _____________________ ________
    Hollis & Soden were on brief for appellee.
    ______________

    ____________________

    March 2, 1993
    ____________________

    _____________________

    *Of the Third Circuit, sitting by designation.


























































    Higginbotham, Senior Circuit Judge. This is an appeal
    Higginbotham, Senior Circuit Judge.
    ____________________

    from an order of summary judgment in favor of defendant, Moore

    Business Forms, Inc., and against plaintiffs, Frank B. Abbadessa

    and Robert D. Mariotti. Abbadessa and Mariotti sued Moore for

    wrongful termination of employment. Moore moved for summary

    judgment, arguing that Abbadessa and Mariotti each agreed in

    writing at the time of their termination to release Moore from

    any claims arising from plaintiffs' employment or termination of

    employment. Plaintiffs opposed the motion for summary judgment,

    each alleging that the agreement to release their claims against

    Moore had been signed under economic duress.

    The United States district court for the District of

    New Hampshire, applying New Hampshire law, granted Moore's

    summary judgment motion as to both Abbadessa and Mariotti. The

    court, in separate orders, found, as a matter of law, that even

    if Abbadessa and Mariotti had signed their respective agreements

    under duress, each also subsequently ratified the agreements by

    failing to repudiate them promptly and by accepting the benefits

    that flowed under the agreements.

    Because we agree that Abbadessa and Mariotti ratified

    their respective resignation agreements, we will affirm the

    district court's orders of summary judgment in favor of Moore.


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    This is a diversity action. Both Abbadessa and Mariotti are

    citizens of New Hampshire. Moore is a Delaware corporation with

    its principal place of business in Illinois. The district court

    had subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1332. We

    have appellate jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1291.



    I

    Frank B. Abbadessa
    __________________

    Frank B. Abbadessa began working as an accountant for

    Moore Business Forms, Inc. in December 1973. By 1988, Abbadessa

    had advanced to the managerial position of Comptroller of Moore's

    Locust Street plant in Dover, New Hampshire. On January 19,

    1988, in a meeting between Abbadessa, R.J. Barth, the General

    Manager of the Locust Street plant, and Brian Groves, the

    Director of Human Resources, Moore requested Abbadessa to resign

    and to sign a resignation agreement. Under the resignation

    agreement, Moore would provide Abbadessa with the following

    benefits from January 19, until April 30 1988: (1) compensation

    in the amount of $4,611.75 per month; (2) payment for any

    vacation owed Abbadessa for 1988; (3) continued participation in

    Moore's Healthcare plan, Dental Plan, and Group Insurance Plan,

    with an option to extend participation after April 30, 1988, if

    Abbadessa made quarterly payments; and (4) payment by Moore for


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    outplacement counseling services to assist Abbadessa in finding

    other employment. The agreement also provided that Abbadessa and

    Moore released each other from any other claims or obligations

    arising from Abbadessa' employment with, and termination by,

    Moore.

    Moore informed Abbadessa that he was being asked to

    resign because his performance had not been satisfactory.

    Further, Moore made clear to Abbadessa that he could either

    resign with the benefits provided under the agreement or not

    resign and face the possibility of being fired without any

    benefits. Abbadessa did not sign the resignation agreement

    during the January 19 meeting. He considered the agreement for

    two weeks and, in early February, he returned it signed,

    backdated to January 20. During the interval between the January

    19 meeting and the time in early February when he signed the

    agreement, Abbadessa sought payment of his vacation pay from

    Moore. Moore apparently refused to pay any benefits until

    Abbadessa signed the resignation agreement. According to

    Abbadessa, he finally signed the agreement because his lack of

    financial resources left him no other choice.

    On May 27, 1988, Abbadessa requested that Moore extend

    payment of the benefits provided under the January 18 agreement

    which had expired on April 30, 1988. Abbadessa requested the


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    extension because he had not been able to find other employment

    and had run out of money. Moore agreed to extend benefits to

    Abbadessa for one more month and amended the January 18 agreement

    to reflect that Abbadessa would receive the benefits provided

    under the original agreement through May 31, 1988. Abbadessa

    signed the amended agreement and dated it June 6, 1988. Toward

    the end of June 1988, Abbadessa again requested that Moore grant

    him a further extension of his benefits. Moore agreed to

    provide Abbadessa with benefits covering half the month of June.

    Finally, in July Abbadessa made one more request for extension of

    his benefits. This time Moore refused.



    Robert D. Mariotti
    __________________

    Robert Mariotti began working as a salesman for Moore

    in December 1970. By 1988, Mariotti had advanced to the

    managerial position of Operations Manager for Moore's Locust

    Street plant. On May 24, 1988, in a meeting between Mariotti,

    Barth and Groves, Moore requested Mariotti to resign and to sign

    a resignation agreement similar to the one presented to Abbadessa

    on January 18, 1988. The agreement provided similar benefits as

    those paid to Abbadessa and covered the period of May 24 to

    August 31, 1988: (1) compensation in the amount of $5,296.60 per

    month; (2) payment for any vacation owed Mariotti for 1988; (3)


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    continued participation in Moore's Healthcare Plan, Dental Plan,

    and Group Insurance Plan, with an option to extend participation

    after August 31, 1988, if Mariotti made quarterly payments; and

    (4) payment by Moore for outplacement counseling services to

    assist Mariotti in finding other employment. The agreement also

    provided that Moore and Mariotti released each other from any

    other claims or obligations arising from Mariotti's employment

    with, or termination by, Moore.

    As with Abbadessa, Moore informed Mariotti that he was

    being asked to resign because his performance had not been

    satisfactory. Mariotti was also presented with the choice of

    resigning with benefits or facing the possibility of being

    terminated without benefits. After thinking about the agreement

    for two days, Mariotti returned it signed on May 26, 1988.

    Mariotti claimed that he signed the agreement under financial

    pressure and that, being aware of Abbadessa's experience with

    Moore, he understood that he would receive no benefits until he

    signed the agreement.



    Procedural Background
    _____________________

    On September 21, 1988, Abbadessa and Mariotti wrote to

    counsel for Moore that "they believed they had been terminated

    without cause in violation of the established policies and


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    procedures of Moore and that they had signed the letters of

    resignation under duress." On April 11, 1989 Abbadessa and

    Mariotti brought separate actions for breach of employment

    contract against Moore in New Hampshire's Strafford County

    Superior Court. Plaintiffs, in their separate complaints,

    alleged that Moore issued written policies, providing that

    employees would not be terminated except for cause and then only

    after being made aware of deficiencies in their job performance

    and given the opportunity to correct those deficiencies.

    According to plaintiffs, these written policies constituted an

    enforceable employment contract under New Hampshire law, which

    Moore breached by terminating plaintiffs without just cause and

    without giving plaintiffs the opportunity to correct what Moore

    deemed to be deficiencies in their job performance.

    On May 5, 1989, both actions were removed to the United

    States district court for the District of New Hampshire on

    Moore's petition pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1441. On September 9,

    1989, Moore moved for summary judgment as to the claims of both

    Abbadessa and Mariotti. Moore argued that the written policy

    upon which Abbadessa and Mariotti relied, which stated that

    employees would not be terminated except for cause, had been

    replaced by a subsequent policy issued during plaintiffs' terms

    of employment. The new policy did not provide that employees


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    would not be terminated except for cause. As such, Moore

    maintained, there existed no enforceable employment contract

    between plaintiffs and Moore. In any event, Moore continued, the

    resignation agreements signed by Abbadessa and Mariotti released

    Moore from any and all liability arising from plaintiffs'

    employment with, or termination by, Moore.

    Abbadessa and Mariotti opposed the motions for summary

    judgment. They argued that they never received notice of the

    change of policy. They also argued that they never received any

    consideration for the new policy, and that New Hampshire law does

    not permit an employer to unilaterally modify conditions of

    employment to the detriment of an employee in the absence of new

    consideration to the employee. As to Moore's claim that they had

    released any right to sue, Abbadessa and Mariotti argued that

    their respective resignation agreements were invalid because they

    had signed the agreements under economic duress.

    On October 25, 1989, the district court denied Moore's

    motion for summary judgment as to Mariotti. On November 7, 1989,

    the court denied Moore's motion for summary judgment as to

    Abbadessa. The court employed the same reasoning to deny both

    motions. According to the court, Moore's motions for summary

    judgment presented three issues: (1) whether Moore's initial

    personnel policy represented an enforceable contract; (2) if it


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    was an enforceable contract, whether it was amended by the

    subsequent policy; and (3) whether Abbadessa and Mariotti signed

    their respective resignation agreements under duress. In denying

    Moore's motions, the court concluded that all three questions

    involved genuine issues of material fact which would have to be

    decided at trial.1

    On August 20, 1991, Moore renewed its motion for

    summary judgment as to Abbadessa, and the next day, on August 21

    1991, Moore renewed its motion for summary judgment as to

    Mariotti. This time, Moore argued that even if Abbadessa and

    Mariotti had signed their resignation agreements under duress,

    they had subsequently ratified the agreements by failing to

    repudiate promptly and by accepting all benefits that flowed

    under the agreements. Abbadessa and Mariotti, in a joint

    memorandum, raised three grounds to defeat Moore's motions for

    summary judgment. First, plaintiffs argued that the doctrine of

    the "law of the case" precluded the district court from

    considering Moore's renewed motions. Second, plaintiffs argued

    that Moore had not pleaded the affirmative defense of


    ____________________

    1The case of Robert Mariotti v. Moore Business Forms was
    __________________________________________
    originally assigned to Judge Loughlin, while the case of
    Abbadessa v. Moore Business Forms was assigned to Judge
    ____________________________________
    Devine. Subsequent to the denial of Moore's first motions
    for summary judgement, both cases were reassigned to Judge
    Stahl's calendar.

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    ratification in its answer or in its original motions for summary

    judgment and that, pursuant to Rule 8(c) of the Federal Rules of

    Civil Procedure, an affirmative defense which is not pleaded is

    waived. Finally, plaintiffs maintained that there were genuine

    issues of material fact as to whether they were capable of

    ratifying the resignation agreements.

    On January 9, 1992, in two separate orders, the court

    granted Moore's motion for summary judgment as to Abbadessa and

    Mariotti. The court rejected plaintiffs' "law of the case" and

    "waiver of unpleaded affirmative defense" arguments, and

    concluded that, under New Hampshire law, plaintiffs had indeed

    ratified their respective resignation agreements and that Moore

    was entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law.

    Abbadessa and Mariotti now appeal, raising two of the

    grounds that were before the district court. Specifically,

    plaintiffs maintain that the "law of the case" doctrine precluded

    the district court from ruling on Moore's renewed motion for

    summary judgment, and that there were genuine issues of material

    fact as to whether plaintiffs were capable of ratifying the

    resignation agreements.



    II




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    Our review of the district court's orders for summary

    judgment is plenary. United States v. One Parcel of Real
    ________________________________________

    Property with Bldgs, 960 F.2d 200, 204 (1st Cir. 1992). A Rule
    ___________________

    56 motion for summary judgment will only be granted if there is

    no genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is

    entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Celotex Corp. v.
    _________________

    Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 106 S. Ct. 2548, 91 L. Ed. 2d 265 (1986).
    _______

    In a diversity action the substantive law of the forum

    state determines which facts are material. Anderson v. Liberty
    ____________________

    Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986). Here, New Hampshire
    ____________

    substantive law will determine if plaintiffs raised genuine

    issues of material fact as to whether they ratified their

    respective resignation agreements. But first, we turn to the

    question of whether the doctrine of the "law of the case"

    precluded the district court from ruling on Moore's renewed

    motion for summary judgment.



    A.

    Under the doctrine of the "law of the case", a decision

    on an issue of law made by the court at one stage of a case

    becomes a binding precedent to be followed in successive stages

    of the same litigation except in unusual circumstances. FCC v.
    _______

    WOKO, Inc., 329 U.S. 223 (1946); U.S. v. Rivera-Martinez, 931
    __________ ________________________


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    F.2d 148, 151 (1st Cir. 1991) Piazza v. Aponte Roque, 909 F.2d
    ______________________

    35, 38 (1st Cir. 1990). 1B J. Moore, Federal Practice 0.404[1]

    (1980).

    Here, the district court, in denying Moore's initial

    motions for summary judgment, decided that there were genuine

    issues of material fact as to whether Abbadessa and Mariotti were

    under such economic duress at the time they signed the

    resignation agreements as to render the agreements voidable. In

    its renewed motions for summary judgment, Moore argued that, even

    if Abbadessa and Moore signed the agreements under the sort of

    economic duress which would render the agreements voidable,

    Abbadessa and Mariotti had nonetheless ratified the agreements by

    their subsequent conduct. The issue of whether Abbadessa and

    Mariotti ratified the agreements is one which the district court

    did not consider, much less decide, in ruling on Moore's initial

    motions for summary judgment.

    We have stated in this circuit that the doctrine of the

    "law of the case" "merely expresses the practice of courts

    generally to refuse to open what has been decided." Piazza, 909
    ______

    F.2d at 38. The issue raised in Moore's renewed motions for

    summary judgment was never decided by the district court.

    Accordingly, the district court was not precluded from




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    considering whether Abbadessa and Mariotti ratified their

    respective resignation agreements.



    B.

    In New Hampshire, contracts signed under economic

    duress are voidable. King Enterprises v. Manchester Water Works,
    ___________________________________________

    122 N.H. 1011, 453 A.2d 1276 (1982); Cheshire Oil Co. v.
    ______________________

    Springfield Realty Corp., 118 N.H. 232, 385 A.2d 835 (1978). In
    _________________________

    the words of the Supreme Court of New Hampshire: "the payment of

    money or the making of a contract might be under such

    circumstances of business necessity or compulsion as will render

    the same involuntary and entitle the party so coerced to recover

    the money paid or excuse him from performing the contract."

    Cheshire Oil Co., 385 A.2d at 838.
    ________________

    In order to be "excused" from performing the contract,

    a party relying on a theory of business compulsion or economic

    duress must demonstrate four elements. First, the party relying

    on economic duress must have involuntarily accepted the terms of

    another. "It must appear that consent was actually induced by

    the pressure applied and would not have been given otherwise."

    Id. at 839, quoting Morrill v. Bank, 90 N.H. 358, 365, 9 A.2d
    ___ _______ ________________

    519, 525 (1939). Second, "the coercive circumstances must have

    been the result of the acts of the opposite party." Cheshire Oil
    ____________


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    Co., 385 A.2d at 839. Third, "the pressure must have been
    ___

    wrongful." Id. An act or threat of an act may be wrongful
    ___

    "although the act or threat is not criminal or tortious or in

    violation of a contractual duty." Id. Fourth, "circumstances
    ___

    must have permitted no other alternative but to accept the terms

    of another if there is to be a finding of business compulsion."

    Id. Thus, if the party relying on the theory of economic duress
    ___

    "had a legal remedy adequate to redress or compensate for the

    injury threatened, the threat will not amount to duress." Id.
    ___

    Given the above definition of economic duress, there

    are, as the district court found, disputed issues of material

    fact as to whether Abbadessa and Moore satisfied the four

    elements of duress. Specifically, looking at the facts in the

    light most favorable to plaintiffs, it is disputed whether the

    "coercive circumstances" surrounding the signing of the

    resignation agreements were "the result of acts of" Moore.

    Abbadessa and Mariotti claim that Moore created "coercive

    circumstances" by refusing to negotiate any of the terms of the

    agreements and by withholding benefits plaintiffs were entitled

    to until they signed the agreement. It is further disputed

    whether the choice given by Moore to Abbadessa and Mariotti of

    resigning with benefits or not resigning and risking termination

    without benefits was "wrongful." Abbadessa and Mariotti claim


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    that Moore's bargaining position was wrongful because it was done

    in bad faith. It is finally disputed whether Abbadessa and

    Mariotti were left with "no other alternatives but to accept the

    terms" proposed by Moore. Abbadessa and Mariotti claim that they

    were not fully aware of any internal appeal procedures available

    to them at the time they were presented with the requests for

    them to resign. They also claim that they were in no financial

    or mental shape to begin court actions.

    Therefore, assuming for purposes of summary judgment

    that Abbadessa and Mariotti signed the agreements under duress,

    the question now becomes whether Moore is nonetheless entitled to

    judgment as a matter of law because Abbadessa and Mariotti

    ratified the agreements by their subsequent actions.

    In New Hampshire, voidable contracts are subject to

    ratification. Sawtelle v. Tatone, 105 N.H. 398, 201 A.2d 111, 115
    __________________

    (1964). Since a contract executed under economic duress is

    voidable it is also subject to ratification. New Hampshire has

    never specifically identified the circumstances under which a

    contract executed under economic duress will be considered to

    have been ratified. But generally, a voidable contract will be

    deemed to have been ratified when the party who is entitled to

    avoid the contract "does any act which amounts to a ratification

    after full knowledge of all the facts and circumstances." Id.
    ___


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    Acts amounting to ratification are payment or acceptance of the

    benefits of the contract and failure to repudiate the contract

    promptly. Id. 2 As the Supreme Court of New Hampshire has
    ___

    stated: "A party cannot treat the contract as binding and as

    rescinded at the same time, and after he has elected to stand by

    the contract and receive the benefits it confers on him, and has

    thus ratified and confirmed it, he cannot thus rescind and

    repudiate it." Bechard v. Amey, 82 N.H. 462, 471, 136 A. 370, 375
    _______________

    (1926).

    Here, both Abbadessa and Mariotti sought to treat their

    resignation agreements as "binding and rescinded at the same

    time." Both accepted the benefits the agreements conferred on

    them and neither attempted to repudiate the agreements promptly.

    ____________________

    2See also Hillside Assoc. of Hollis, Inc. v. Maine Bonding &
    ________ __________________________________________________
    Casualty Co., 135 N.H. 325, 605 A.2d 1026 (1992) (voidable
    _____________
    insurance contract between insurance agent and construction
    company based on mutual mistake was not ratified when
    insurance company promptly notified construction company of
    mistake); Derouin v. Granite State Realty, Inc., 123 N.H.
    _______________________________________
    145, 148, 459 A.2d 231, 233 (1983) (voidable land sale
    contract based on mutual mistake was ratified because
    purchaser had performed significant improvements to property
    and property could not be returned to seller in
    substantially the same condition in which purchaser received
    it); Michael v. Rochester, 119 N.H. 734, 736, 407 A.2d 819,
    ____________________
    821 (1979) (city ratified initially invalid construction
    contract for building a water main when it failed to notify
    the contractor before construction was complete that it
    intended to repudiate contract); Lucier v. Manchester, 80
    _____________________
    N.H. 361, 363, 117 A. 286, 287 (1922) (acceptance of
    services of attorney by city amounted to ratification of
    invalid employment contract).

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    Abbadessa considered the agreement for two weeks before signing

    it. After his benefits under the January 19 agreement had

    expired, Abbadessa requested that Moore extend him benefits on

    three separate occasions. Moore acceded to two of these requests

    and refused to extend added benefits on Abbadessa's third and

    final request. So, from February 1988 until April 1988,

    Abbadessa treated the agreement as binding by accepting the

    benefits Moore had promised. Moreover, from April 1988 until

    June 1988, Abbadessa further ratified the original agreement by

    making three separate requests that Moore extend benefits which

    were not owed under the agreement. It was not until after Moore

    had refused additional extensions of benefits that Abbadessa

    notified Moore's counsel by letter in July 1988 that he had

    signed the agreement under duress. Finally, even after Abbadessa

    had filed his suit against Moore, at no point did he attempt to

    return to Moore the benefits of the agreement which he now claims

    he signed under duress.

    Similarly, Mariotti considered his agreement for two

    days before signing it. From May 1988 until August 1988,

    Mariotti continued to receive the benefits under the agreement.

    Even after Mariotti supposedly wrote to Moore Counsel in July

    1988 that he had signed the agreement under the duress, he

    continued to received the benefits under the agreement for August


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    1988. As with Abbadessa, even after having filed suit against

    Moore, at no point did Mariotti attempt to return to Moore the

    benefits of the agreement which he now claims he signed under

    duress.

    The Supreme Court of New Hampshire has written that "a

    person seeking to rescind cannot treat the contract as rescinded

    and binding at the same time." Sawtelle, 201 A.2d at 115. By
    ________

    accepting the benefits of their respective resignation agreements

    and by failing to notify Moore promptly that they intended to

    repudiate the agreements, Abbadessa and Mariotti treated the

    agreements as binding. After having done so, they now wish to

    treat the agreements as rescinded. That, under New Hampshire

    law, they may not do.

    Abbadessa and Mariotti argue that they could not have

    possibly ratified the agreements until after the duress was

    removed. Since, according to Abbadessa and Mariotti, they signed

    the agreements under duress because basically, by asking them to

    resign, Moore caused them to be in desperate need for money, we

    understand plaintiffs' argument to mean that duress would have

    been removed when they were no longer in such dire financial

    straits. But, as we stated at the outset of our discussion, the

    issue in this case is whether appellants raised genuine issues of

    material fact as to whether they ratified their respective


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    agreements. Stated another way: whether they raised genuine

    issues of material fact that the claimed duress had not been

    removed between the time they signed the agreements and the time

    they brought this action. Appellants have failed to raise any

    facts to that effect. While Moore has advanced undisputed facts

    that appellants accepted the benefits of their respective

    agreements, Abbadessa and Mariotti have offered no facts

    (disputed or undisputed) about how long the economic duress

    lasted; or put another way, if and when their claimed duress

    ceased.3 Having failed to satisfy their burden of production,

    ____________________

    3We should also point out that we have found no authority
    that New Hampshire has adopted or would adopt the theory
    that a contract signed under economic duress is capable of
    being ratified only after the duress is removed. The only
    case from this circuit addressing the issue is Ismert and
    __________
    Associates, Inc. v. New England Mutual Life Insurance Co.,
    ___________________________________________________________
    801 F.2d 536 (1st Cir. 1986). In that case, this circuit
    considered an action brought by a tax consulting service
    firm against an insurance company. The firm argued that the
    agreement it had signed, releasing the insurance company
    from any claims resulting from the firm's loss of business
    opportunities, was unenforceable because it was obtained
    under duress. Judge Maletz authored the majority opinion as
    well as a dissent. In his dissent on the issue of economic
    duress, Judge Maletz wrote that "there can be no affirmance
    [of a contract] unless the duress has ended." Ismert and
    ___________
    Associates, 801 F.2d at 548. Judge Breyer, writing for the
    __________
    majority on the question of duress, did not address the
    issue of whether a contract signed under duress is not
    capable of being ratified until the duress has ended.
    Instead, Judge Breyer found that plaintiff had not made a
    sufficient showing that it signed the release agreement
    under duress. Id.. In Ismert, this circuit was applying
    ___ ______
    Massachusetts law. Thus, the decision is not controlling in
    this case involving New Hampshire law. Moreover, the

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    their argument necessarily fails. See, e.g., Mesnick v. General
    ___ ____ __________________

    Elec. Co., 950 F.2d 816, 822 (1st Cir. 1991) (where opponent of
    _________

    summary judgment motion "bears the ultimate burden of proof, he

    must present definite, competent evidence" sufficient to document

    a factual disagreement over some issue of material fact).

    For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the summary

    judgment orders of the district court in favor of Moore Business

    Forms, Inc., and against Frank B. Abbadessa and Robert D.

    Mariotti.



    Affirmed.
    ________




















    ____________________

    statement of Judge Maletz that "there can be no affirmance
    unless duress has ended", cannot even be used as persuasive
    authority in this case given that it was not adopted by a
    majority of the panel.

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