White v. Fessenden School , 358 F. App'x 208 ( 2009 )


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  •                Not for Publication in West's Federal Reporter
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    Nos. 09-1259, 09-1420, 09-1430
    H. MARK WHITE, individually
    and as next friend for his son H.T.W.,
    Plaintiff, Appellee,
    v.
    THE FESSENDEN SCHOOL, PETER DRAKE, DANIEL KIELY,
    and WENDY PEARRE,
    Defendants, Appellants,
    and
    TUCKER, HEIFETZ & SALTZMAN, LLP, and
    WILMER CUTLER PICKERING HALE AND DORR LLP,
    Appellants.
    ON APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. Joseph L. Tauro, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Lynch, Chief Judge,
    Torruella and Howard, Circuit Judges.
    George P Butler III with whom Phillip J. De Rosier, Leslie
    A.F. Calhoun, Robert Y. Murray, and Ramsey & Murray were on brief
    for plaintiffs-appellees H. Mark White and H.T.W.
    Robert S. Frank Jr. with whom William P. Rose and Tucker,
    Heifetz & Staltzman, LLP were on brief for defendants-appellants
    The Fessenden School and Peter Drake, Daniel Kiely, and Wendy
    Pearre and appellant Tucker, Heifetz & Saltzman, LLP.
    Mark C. Fleming with whom Jerome P. Facher, Michael R.
    Heyison, and Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP were on
    brief for appellant Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP.
    December 28, 2009
    Per Curiam.    The issue before us is whether the parties
    in this case reached an enforceable settlement agreement.       The
    underlying case concerns claims brought by a student, now a sixth
    grader, and his father against the student's former school.   It is
    not necessary to describe those claims to decide this appeal.
    On September 22, 2008, the day trial was to start (over
    a year after the case was filed), the experienced trial judge asked
    the parties if they wanted to make a last effort to settle the
    case.   They said yes.    Counsel for the plaintiffs reported the
    parties had begun negotiations shortly before and they believed
    they had achieved an agreement in principle on a noneconomic term
    but were far apart on any economic terms.       In response to the
    court's question as to whether the only issue remaining unresolved
    was the amount of a monetary settlement, counsel for the school
    said,
    Well, we have a lot of issues to work out on
    that noneconomic issue . . . so if we got
    there, we're certainly going to request
    assistance, perhaps assistance from The Court;
    but in principle we had a deal on that as of
    the week before the pretrial.
    The parties then spent some time trying to negotiate the
    economic terms.   The court, wisely, did not participate in those
    negotiations. Ultimately, the parties reported they had reached an
    agreement on the economic terms that was "subject to finalization
    of the noneconomic issues" and there was work they "still ha[d] to
    do" on one of those issues.   The court replied that "we will report
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    the case closed, as having been settled, and give you two months to
    move to reopen it if for some reason or other, you're unable to
    finish the paperwork."
    Perhaps in a sense of optimism, the parties told the
    court that it could enter a settlement order but asked the court to
    retain jurisdiction over enforcement.      The court asked, "Well in
    what way?     How am I going to enforce it?"      Plaintiffs' counsel
    replied that there could be a dispute over "it."     He suggested one
    reason for the retention of jurisdiction was that the parties could
    need the assistance of the court to work out the noneconomic terms.
    There was no written agreement at this or any later point.1
    The court then entered a settlement order dated September
    22, 2008.2     However, the optimism of the parties that they had
    reached agreement on the noneconomic terms was misplaced.      One of
    the noneconomic terms concerned what the parties referred to as a
    1
    Because of the sensitive nature of the information, the
    parties asked the court to extend a sealing order and it did so.
    For that reason as well, we do not go into details.
    2
    The settlement order said,
    The   court   having  been   advised   on
    September 22, 2008 by counsel for the parties
    that the above action has been settled:
    IT IS ORDERED that this action is hereby
    dismissed without prejudice to reconsideration
    and possible re-opening if within 60 days of
    this order a motion is filed which represents
    that the terms of the settlement agreement
    have not been performed and there is good
    cause for the non-performing party or parties
    to have failed to perform.
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    "reenrollment contract," by which the parties meant very different
    things.
    On November 12, 2008, the plaintiffs filed a "motion to
    enforce the September 22, 2008 settlement or, in the alternative,
    to reopen the case and proceed to trial."                The defendants filed an
    opposition to the plaintiffs' motion, which took the position that
    a settlement agreement had been reached in September but the
    plaintiffs were departing from that agreed "reenrollment contract"
    in    two   material   respects.        They    also    joined    the   plaintiffs'
    alternative request that the court reopen the case for trial.                    It
    was    clear    from   the   parties'    filings       that    they   fundamentally
    disagreed      about   the   substantive       content    of    any   "reenrollment
    contract," which standard form of competing contracts was involved,
    what consequences flowed from it, and how the contract could be
    used.
    The court convened a nonevidentiary hearing on January 5,
    2009, and asked what matters were in dispute, including the dispute
    about the reenrollment contract.           Saying this was the last help it
    could give the parties, the court then offered its own version of
    what the reenrollment contract was and told plaintiffs' counsel to
    submit to the court a draft order embodying that version.                       The
    parties spent the hearing jockeying for position to get the court
    to endorse and enforce each party's version of the reenrollment
    contract.       No one explicitly discussed the alternate relief of
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    sending the case back for trial because there was no agreed
    settlement. With no settlement to enforce, however, the only thing
    the court could do was order the case to trial.               Indeed, the court
    said that if there were further proceedings, they would be before
    a different judge.
    Plaintiffs'      counsel,    as     the    court    had    requested,
    submitted a draft order.         In our view it went well beyond the
    court's offered resolution of the disputed term "reenrollment
    contract;" it also sanctioned counsel for the school, ordering
    counsel   to   pay   the   attorneys'   fees    and   costs     the   plaintiffs
    incurred bringing the motion to enforce. The defendants protested,
    but the court, on January 22, 2009, entered the plaintiffs' five-
    page proposed order as an "Order of Settlement and Judgement."                As
    to the sanctions, the court held no hearing, and it made no
    separate findings why sanctions were appropriate or that defense
    counsel had acted in bad faith or in violation of any order.                The
    court also did not respond to the arguments of the law firm that
    was the school's general counsel, but not the school's litigation
    counsel, that the firm had no notice it might be sanctioned and
    that there was no basis to sanction it.         Final judgment was entered
    on April 6, 2009, on the basis of the January 22 order.               The school
    and the sanctioned counsel have appealed from that judgment, which
    embodies the January 22 order.
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    We have carefully reviewed the record in this case and
    conclude that the parties never had an enforceable settlement
    agreement because they never agreed on the content, consequences,
    or use of the so-called reenrollment contract.        There is no doubt
    that these disputes over the "reenrollment contract" were about a
    material term of the contract; indeed, the disagreement may have
    gone to the most material issues in the underlying litigation.         To
    the extent the trial court thought there was no ambiguity in the
    parties' previous use of the term "reenrollment contract" and so
    there was no material disagreement, that was plain error, whether
    viewed as an issue of law or of fact.     See, e.g., Fid. & Guar. Ins.
    Co. v. Star Equip. Corp., 
    541 F.3d 1
    , 5 (1st Cir. 2008) (district
    courts may not summarily enforce settlement agreements when a
    genuine   dispute   over   the   agreement's   material   terms   exists);
    Malave v. Carney Hosp., 
    170 F.3d 217
    , 220 (1st Cir. 1999) (same);
    Warner v. Rossignol, 
    513 F.2d 678
    , 683 (1st Cir. 1975) (same); see
    also Magallanes v. SBC, 
    472 F.3d 923
    , 924 (7th Cir. 2006) ("A valid
    and enforceable settlement agreement requires a meeting of the
    minds on all material terms.").       Both the September 22 statements
    and the later filings established that there was only an ongoing
    dispute and no agreement.
    It is so clear there was no settlement the court could
    enforce that there is no point in remanding this case for an
    evidentiary hearing. See F.A.C., Inc. v. Cooperativa de Seguros de
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    Vida de P.R. (F.A.C. I), 
    449 F.3d 185
    , 194 (1st Cir. 2006)
    (considering whether the parties "had testimony worth presenting"
    about a settlement's terms when deciding not to remand for an
    evidentiary hearing); see also Quint v. A.E. Staley Mfg. Co., 
    246 F.3d 11
    , 15 (1st Cir. 2001) ("There are certainly instances in
    which no oral contract is formed where material terms are not yet
    agreed upon, and no agreement is reached until there is a written
    agreement embodying those material terms.") (citing Salem Laundry
    Co. v. New England Teamsters and Trucking Indus. Pension Fund, 
    829 F.2d 278
    , 280-81 (1st Cir. 1987)).
    It is true that sometimes courts may construe the terms
    of a settlement, particularly when the judge has personal knowledge
    of the negotiations.         E.g., F.A.C. I, 
    449 F.3d at 192, 194
    .        Here
    the   judge    did     not   have   personal   knowledge   of   the   parties'
    negotiations, so that could not have been the basis for the court's
    decision.      See, e.g., Malave, 
    170 F.3d at 220-21
     (holding that a
    district court could not summarily enforce a settlement when it was
    obvious from the pleadings that a dispute existed and when the
    court had no personal knowledge of the settlement negotiations).
    It is permissible but often unwise for counsel to inform
    the court a case is settled when they have no more than an oral
    settlement agreement.         F.A.C. I, 
    449 F.3d at 187
    ; see also, e.g.,
    Quint,   
    246 F.3d at 15
    .    That   situation   frequently     leads   to
    proceedings to "clarify" what the "agreement" was.                  See, e.g.,
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    F.A.C., Inc. v. Cooperativa de Seguros de Vida de P.R. (F.A.C. II),
    
    563 F.3d 1
    , 3-6 (1st Cir. 2009) (describing the long history of
    disputes over the meaning of an oral settlement that forced the
    district court and this court to interpret its terms and that
    culminated in sanctions that this court vacated).
    The district court was attempting to be helpful and had
    been patient and shown restraint throughout a contentious case.
    But in the absence of a trial and a liability finding, it was
    beyond the power of the district court to impose its own resolution
    of material disputed issues that the parties did not agree to, and
    it could not do so under the rubric of a settlement order.                      As
    there was no enforceable settlement, there was no possible basis
    for   sanctions    orders   against   the   defendants     or   any   of   their
    counsel. We need not address the other objections to the sanctions
    order.   See Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 
    501 U.S. 32
    , 45-46 (1991)
    ("[A] court may assess attorney's fees when a party has 'acted in
    bad faith, vexatiously, wantonly, or for oppressive reasons.'"
    (quoting Alyeska Pipeline Serv. Co. v. Wilderness Soc., 
    421 U.S. 240
    , 258-59 (1975))).
    We     reverse   and   vacate.    We   remand   this   case     to    a
    different judge for trial.        Perhaps the considerable legal talent
    which counsel has brought to this appeal can still resolve this
    matter short of trial.
    No costs are awarded.
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