YOAV KRILL VS. IDT CORPORATION, INC.(L-2012-13, ESSEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2017 )


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  •                         NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court."
    Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the
    parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R.1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-5664-14T3
    YOAV KRILL,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    IDT CORPORATION, INC.,
    Defendant-Appellant,
    and
    HOWARD JONAS,
    Defendant.
    Argued March 16, 2017 – Decided July 21, 2017
    Before Judges Alvarez, Accurso and Manahan.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Law Division, Essex County, Docket No. L-2012-
    13.
    Jason C. Cyrulnik (Boies Schiller & Flexner
    LLP) of the New York Bar, admitted pro hac
    vice, argued the cause for appellant (Reed
    Smith LLP, and Mr. Cyrulnik, attorneys; Mr.
    Cyrulnik, of counsel and on the brief; Daniel
    Mateo, on the brief).
    Leonard Z. Kaufmann argued the cause for
    respondent (Cohn Lifland Pearlman Herrmann &
    Knopf LLP, attorneys; Mr. Kaufmann, on the
    brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Defendant IDT Corporation, Inc.1 appeals a jury's verdict
    after   a   three-day    trial   awarding   $1.5 million    in   damages    to
    plaintiff Yoav Krill on his breach of contract complaint.            For the
    reasons that follow, we affirm.
    At the close of Krill's case, IDT unsuccessfully moved for a
    directed verdict.       In denying the motion, the judge observed that
    "the ultimate determination of the facts is going to rest with
    findings of credibility . . . within the purview of the jury
    alone."     The jury verdict sheet, tracking the complaint, presented
    the issues in readily understandable terms, to which the jury
    responded definitively:
    1.   Did   Plaintiff   Yoav  Krill   and   IDT
    Corporation form a contract? YES; 8-0.
    2.   Did IDT breach the contract with Yoav
    Krill? YES; 6-2.
    3.   Did IDT breach the implied covenant of
    good faith and fair dealing? YES; 8-0.
    4.   Did Yoav Krill incur damages a result of
    the breach of the contract? YES; 8-0.
    5.   What is the amount of damages incurred
    by Yoav Krill as a result of the breach of the
    contract? $1.5 million; 6-2.
    In her statement of reasons denying defendant's motion for
    judgment    notwithstanding      the   verdict   (JNOV),   the   judge   first
    1
    The only count in the complaint naming defendant Howard Jonas,
    the fifth count, alleged common-law fraud. That count against him
    and IDT was dismissed on November 7, 2014, on partial summary
    judgment.
    2                             A-5664-14T3
    correctly stated the standard for determining such applications.
    She   next   reviewed   the   testimony   developed   during   the    trial,
    concluding:
    Ultimately, the jury's verdict involved
    weighing issues of credibility on material
    facts. The jury charge was without objection
    and    included    that   consideration    and
    specificity were two necessary elements that
    they must find in order to return a verdict
    in favor of plaintiff. In sum, the court finds
    that reasonable minds could differ, and there
    were significant issues of credibility which
    were resolved by the jury in plaintiff's
    favor.
    By way of background, Krill became employed by IDT in May
    1998, the same year he met Jonas, with whom he became friends.
    IDT is a telecommunications company having its principal place of
    business in Newark. Krill has advanced degrees in various subjects
    including mathematics.        Before working for IDT, he was employed
    at LL Airlines, Basic Israel Telecom, and Alcatel. Krill developed
    international service for IDT, traveling frequently between Europe
    and New Jersey.
    The year he first began to work for the company, Krill
    assisted Jonas through an employee challenge to Jonas' management.
    When IDT expanded in 1999, Krill became a senior vice president
    and general director of IDT Europe.         He traveled throughout the
    globe, building telecom connectivity, including the installation
    of submarine cables from Europe to Israel and Egypt.                 He was
    3                               A-5664-14T3
    instrumental in the installation of trans-Atlantic and trans-
    Pacific cables for IDT.
    Krill lived in Switzerland, from where he managed IDT's
    subsidiaries and global operations.                   His annual compensation in
    the 2000s ranged from $150,000 to $200,000 annually, with bonuses
    in one year of $1 million.           In April or May 2007, Krill advised
    Jonas that he wanted to retire in 2008 upon attaining age sixty-
    seven, as he would then be eligible for certain retirement benefits
    in Israel.       Jonas agreed to accommodate him, and to allow him to
    continue working until September 2008, when he would attain the
    necessary age.         Krill's annual compensation was increased from
    $150,000 to $190,000.
    In May 2008, Krill learned from Shmuel Jonas, Jonas' son,
    that Krill would be terminated by the end of the month.                       Krill
    immediately contacted Jonas, who agreed to allow Krill to stay on
    until September.       Despite these assurances, on June 3, 2008, Krill
    received    an    email     from   managing      counsel    for    IDT   Labor   and
    Employment,       advising    him    that       his     separation   and    release
    agreements were available.
    When Krill returned to his office from Israel, it was only
    to find he was locked out and that his access card for entry into
    the building no longer worked.            Jonas' son advised that he would
    not   be   paid   if   he    did   not   sign    the     release   and   separation
    4                                  A-5664-14T3
    agreement.    As a result, Krill retained counsel, Bruce Johnson,
    Esquire, who wrote to IDT's Labor and Employment attorney, advising
    that he had been retained to represent Krill.             On June 9, 2008,
    Krill contacted James Courter, the IDT Chief Executive Officer
    (CEO), and protested his termination.            On June 12, 2008, Jonas
    contacted Krill and advised that the termination had been an error,
    and agreed his employment could continue until September 2008.
    On June 26, 2008, Johnson wrote to IDT seeking to enter into
    a written agreement for a $3.5 million severance package, asserting
    that Krill had been fired based on his age and nationality, and
    treated unlike similarly situated managers who upon separation
    received   substantial    severance       pay.   The   letter   specifically
    referred to Krill's intent to file suit in the event no agreement
    could be reached.
    The following day, Jonas called Krill and on July 2, the men
    met at a restaurant.     During the meeting, Jonas explained that the
    company was encountering some financial difficulties.            They agreed
    to meet to engage in further discussions, ultimately rescheduling
    to July 10.
    When Krill met with Jonas, he demanded $3.5 million based on
    his   knowledge   of   other   IDT   employees   who   received   severance
    packages upon the conclusion of their service to the company.             For
    5                              A-5664-14T3
    example, Krill mentioned his own assistant, who received a $2.5
    million severance payment.
    Krill and Jonas met again on July 30, 2008, at which point
    according to Krill the men agreed he should be paid $2.5 million.
    Because IDT was experiencing financial difficulties, Jonas said
    the money could not be paid immediately.
    Krill testified that Jonas agreed to pay $250,000 in salary
    for four years, and two additional payments of $800,000 and
    $700,000.   In return, Krill agreed to be available for additional
    work for IDT as necessary over the next four years, and that he
    would forego suing the company because the parties had arrived at
    an agreement.   On cross-examination, Krill appeared to contradict
    himself and stated that he did not agree to release any "hostile
    claim" he may have had.
    During his July 30, 2008 meeting with Jonas, Krill called his
    attorney on speakerphone, and reviewed the terms of the agreement
    the two men had reached.   Jonas, according to Johnson's testimony,
    confirmed the financial terms, and said that Johnson and Ira
    Greenstein, a lawyer who represented that he was the president of
    IDT, would finalize the terms.    Krill later advised Courter, who
    was present for part of the meeting, that a deal had been struck.
    Krill's salary and work privileges were reinstated in August
    2008.   In August and September, Krill, Johnson, and Greenstein met
    6                          A-5664-14T3
    regarding the agreement.            Greenstein advised it was his job to
    arrange for the $1.5 million additional payments, and that Dov
    Schwell, an IDT attorney, would arrange for the four annual
    $250,000 payments.        At one of these meetings, Greenstein said that
    the $1.5 million would be financed through an affiliate company.
    At trial, Krill testified that Greenstein never questioned the
    $2.5 million figure.         Greenstein did not testify.
    On September 24, 2008, Jonas called Krill to confirm the
    agreement, but mentioned that there were difficulties in obtaining
    the money.      He offered to immediately pay $625,000 and cut the
    lawyers out of the deal.           Krill refused.
    In the summer of 2009, Krill and Courter met at the Newark
    Club. Krill testified that Courter confirmed that Jonas had agreed
    to the settlement.
    Throughout the four years he was paid $250,000 annually by
    IDT,   Krill    was   the   chairman    of    a   business    known   as   Suspect
    Detection      Systems,     from    which    enterprise      he   received     stock
    options.     IDT was aware of his involvement and did not object.
    IDT never paid Krill the $1.5 million in additional payments.
    During his four years of receiving the $250,000 payments,
    Krill assisted in a lawsuit involving Tyco.               He may have also been
    involved in a deposition in a case against Telligent, but could
    not recall the date.               Krill said that neither he nor Jonas
    7                                   A-5664-14T3
    discussed a release, non-compete, or non-disparagement agreement.
    No more specific discussion regarding the work that Krill would
    perform was ever conducted.
    Krill, at least, did not consider that unusual.     He had never
    had a written agreement with Jonas regarding his employment.      When
    shown a copy of a proposed 1998 employment agreement bearing his
    signature, Krill identified the document at trial as merely a
    proposal presented by his own attorney when he first began to work
    for IDT.   It was never signed by the company.   Krill said that the
    chief operating officer of the company told him that IDT did not
    enter into written agreements for executives.
    On cross-examination, Krill was asked about the failure of
    the parties to have entered into a written agreement, and whether
    that was the result of the absence of any "meeting of the minds
    between [he] and IDT[.]"   Krill responded, "correct."
    Johnson's   account   corroborated   Krill's   testimony.       He
    recalled that during the July 30 phone call, Jonas confirmed that
    IDT would pay Krill $250,000 per year for four years, would also
    pay $800,000 immediately, and $700,000 at a later date.      Johnson
    could not remember the date that was discussed.     When he said that
    some form of security would be necessary to guarantee the payments,
    Jonas agreed.
    8                            A-5664-14T3
    Johnson    also     recalled       meeting        twice     with        Krill    and
    Greenstein, and discussing how the money would be obtained to pay
    Krill.     Greenstein stated that Schwell would be processing the
    $250,000    annual   payments,     and     that     Krill     would      be    providing
    additional    services     for    that     compensation.            The       additional
    services    would    include     working     on    a    dispute     involving         Tyco,
    remaining chairman of the board of IDT Europe, assisting IDT in
    negotiations with the IRS involving the sale of NotetoPhone, and
    facilitating an opportunity for IDT to invest in Suspect Detection
    Systems, Ltd., in which Krill had been heavily involved.
    Johnson recalled Greenstein saying that he was personally
    attempting to obtain the remaining $1.5 million, which Johnson
    understood would be paid in an initial, secured $800,000 payment
    within sixty days, possibly coming from another corporate entity,
    while the remaining $700,000 would also be secured, but paid in
    yearly increments.       After the meeting, Johnson received an email
    from Greenstein to the effect that he should be able to deliver
    as discussed within a sixty-day timetable.
    Johnson also testified that Schwell was not aware of the
    $800,000 and $700,000 payments, and was involved only in drafting
    an employment agreement.          The document Schwell prepared included
    the   $250,000   annual    compensation           but   not   the    remaining         $1.5
    million.     Johnson marked up the employment agreement and sent an
    9                                       A-5664-14T3
    email    to   Greenstein,       suggesting   that    perhaps   some    discussion
    should be had with Schwell because Schwell was unaware of the
    terms that Krill and Jonas had reached.
    Johnson's proposed changes to the Schwell agreement revised
    the scope of Krill's employment.              Johnson's changes were: that
    Krill was not required to work in Newark nor required to devote
    his     efforts    to     the    company     full-time,    increased        Krill's
    compensation in the fourth year from $175,000 to $250,000, removed
    a provision which would have nullified prior bonuses, removed a
    "release" provision, added an indemnification clause for Krill's
    benefit, amended the terms regarding termination to ensure that
    Krill would be paid the $1 million annual installments he had been
    promised, and modified the merger clause to allow the parties to
    enter    into     other    agreements      because    there    might   be     other
    understandings that the parties would reach related to Krill's
    employment.
    Johnson sent the marked-up document to Schwell, but never
    received any communication that the changes were unacceptable or
    negotiations broken off.          No written agreement was ever reached.
    In the email to Greenstein, Johnson had also sought an update
    on    the     $1.5 million      additional     payments.       Greenstein        had
    reaffirmed that he was responsible for funding those payments.
    10                                  A-5664-14T3
    Johnson met again with Greenstein and Krill on September 2,
    2008, to discuss securing the $1.5 million payments.                Greenstein
    confirmed IDT was still committed to the same terms that Jonas had
    confirmed to Johnson on July 30, 2008.             They discussed including
    language     in   the   employment     agreement    Schwell   was     drafting
    regarding Krill's entitlement to additional bonus payments, and
    discussed drafting a side letter or a side agreement in which
    plaintiff agreed to waive any age-related claims against IDT.
    Greenstein    asked     for   wiring    instructions    for   the    $800,000
    installment because another company other than IDT would be making
    the payment and did not have that information.
    Johnson and Greenstein subsequently communicated regarding
    the security for the $1.5 million payment.             No one ever advised
    Johnson that IDT was not going to complete the transaction, nor
    did anyone from IDT ever advise him that the company had not
    entered into an agreement to pay Krill a total of $2.5 million.
    Johnson was adamant that he was attempting to memorialize an
    agreement that had been already reached between Krill and Jonas.
    Although Greenstein did not testify, Schwell did.                 At the
    time of these negotiations, he had been employed as in-house
    counsel for IDT.        His testimony was that the reason no written
    agreement was entered into was that key terms were not agreed
    upon, including minimum performance standards, IDT's right to
    11                              A-5664-14T3
    termination, releases, indemnities requested by Krill, and the
    insertion of a merger clause.    He also stated that he was only
    responsible for the $250,000 a year payments, and that he had no
    knowledge of the additional $1.5 million settlement.     He never
    specifically broke off negotiations because the parties could not
    agree on terms.    He acknowledged that despite the absence of a
    written agreement, Krill was paid $250,000 a year for each of four
    years.
    Courter, although he was not present during the meetings
    between Krill and Jonas, confirmed he met with Krill at the Newark
    Club.    Contrary to Krill's testimony, he said that he told Krill
    there was no agreement.
    Courter was the only witness who testified it was standard
    practice for the company to enter into written agreements with
    high-level employees, a fact disputed by the other witnesses,
    including those testifying for IDT.
    Jonas testified that he had agreed to pay Krill half of his
    salary and keep him on part-time for four years until he reached
    retirement age in Israel.     His son mistakenly fired Krill four
    months before he became eligible.     Although Jonas acknowledged
    receiving a letter from Krill's attorney demanding $3.5 million,
    he thought the amount was ridiculous considering that Krill had
    already received close to $800,000 for the last four years.
    12                         A-5664-14T3
    Furthermore, Jonas claimed that he agreed to keep Krill on IDT's
    payroll for four more years with an annual salary increase to
    $250,000, if he was able to do so, only because Krill had been
    diagnosed with thyroid cancer, and his wife had health issues as
    well.   He denied the payments were made pursuant to an agreement.
    In deposition, however, Jonas had confirmed that IDT agreed
    to pay Krill in exchange for his availability and his decision not
    to sue the company for wrongful termination.         He also acknowledged
    that even though Krill had agreed to remain available, there were
    no specific responsibilities he was expected to fulfil during this
    period of time.
    Jonas   denied    agreeing    to     pay     Krill   the    additional
    $1.5 million in severance. He acknowledged having a meeting during
    the course of which Johnson was on the phone, however, he said
    that the conversation was like "watching a movie" because he never
    agreed to anything.    He denied being put on speakerphone, denied
    confirming   a   $2.5 million   payment    with    Johnson,     denied   ever
    speaking with Johnson, and insisted he did not even know what his
    voice sounded like.    Jonas further testified that Greenstein held
    a ceremonial title as president of IDT, but did not have the
    authority to commit to payments on behalf of IDT.
    Now on appeal, IDT raises the following points for our
    consideration:
    13                                 A-5664-14T3
    I.     JNOV Dismissing Krill's Claim Should Be
    Granted Because The Undisputed Evidence
    Showed That The Parties Never Reached
    Agreement On A Release From Krill To IDT
    – A Term That Krill Himself Alleged To
    Be Material.
    II.    The Parties' Undisputed Failure To Reach
    Agreement On The Terms Of Krill's
    Purported Employment Warrants JNOV In
    IDT's Favor, Or, At A Minimum, A New
    Trial.
    III. At A Minimum, IDT Is Entitled To A New
    Trial Because The Evidence Shows That The
    Parties Did Not Intend To Be Bound By
    Their July 30 Meeting.
    I.
    A   motion     for   a    judgment   notwithstanding    the   verdict
    under Rule 4:40-2 must be denied if the evidence, together with
    legitimate        inferences     therefrom,     could       sustain        the
    judgment.    Riley v. Keenan, 
    406 N.J. Super. 281
    , 298 (App. Div.)
    (citing Lanzet v. Greenberg, 
    126 N.J. 168
    , 174 (1991)), certif.
    denied, 
    200 N.J. 207
     (2009).          We do not weigh the evidence.
    Polyard v. Terry, 
    160 N.J. Super. 497
    , 505-06 (App. Div. 1978),
    aff'd o.b., 
    79 N.J. 547
     (1979).           Rather, we accept as true all
    evidence which supports the position of the party defending against
    the motion and accord the defending party the benefit of all
    inferences which can reasonably and legitimately be drawn.                   If
    reasonable minds can differ, the motion must be denied.        Filgueiras
    v. Newark Pub. Sch., 
    426 N.J. Super. 449
    , 456 (App. Div.) (quoting
    14                                A-5664-14T3
    Verdicchio v. Ricca, 
    179 N.J. 1
    , 30 (2004)), certif. denied, 
    212 N.J. 460
     (2012).
    This court's review of an order denying a new trial motion
    is limited to consideration of whether it clearly results in a
    miscarriage     of   justice   under   the     law.   R. 2:10-1; Dolson      v.
    Anastasia, 
    55 N.J. 2
    , 5-7 (1969).             Due deference is given to the
    trial court's "feel of the case."           Jastram v. Kruse, 
    197 N.J. 216
    ,
    230 (2008) (citation omitted).          Evidence is viewed in the light
    most favorable to the party opposing the motion, Caldwell v.
    Haynes, 
    136 N.J. 422
    , 432 (1994), and we do not substitute our
    judgment for that of the jury, granting the motion "only where to
    do otherwise would result in a miscarriage of justice shocking to
    the conscience of the court."               Risko v. Thompson Muller Auto.
    Grp.,   Inc.,    
    206 N.J. 506
    ,    521     (2011) (quoting Kulbacki      v.
    Sobchinsky, 
    38 N.J. 435
    , 456 (1962)).
    A "miscarriage of justice" has been described as a "pervading
    sense of "wrongness" needed to justify [an] appellate or trial
    judge undoing of a jury verdict . . . [which] can arise . . . from
    manifest lack of inherently credible evidence to support the
    finding,   obvious     overlooking      or     under-valuation   of   crucial
    evidence, [or] a clearly unjust result. "             Lindenmuth v. Holden,
    
    296 N.J. Super. 42
    , 48 (App. Div. 1996) (alterations in original)
    15                             A-5664-14T3
    (quoting Baxter v. Fairmont Food Co., 
    74 N.J. 588
    , 599 (1977)),
    certif. denied, 
    149 N.J. 34
     (1997).
    II.
    An oral contract requires a meeting of the minds, offer and
    acceptance, consideration, and sufficiently defined terms.                   See
    Weichert Co. Realtors v. Ryan, 
    128 N.J. 427
    , 435 (1992).                       An
    alleged contract is unenforceable if the parties do not agree on
    an essential term or if the essential term is not described with
    sufficient specificity to allow the performance of the parties to
    "be ascertained with reasonable certainty."              
    Ibid.
       Vagueness is
    only fatal where "the contract [is] so vague or indefinite that
    it [can]not realistically be enforced."             Satellite Entm't Ctr.,
    Inc. v. Keaton, 
    347 N.J. Super. 268
    , 277 (App. Div. 2002); see
    Weichert, 
    supra,
     
    128 N.J. at 435
     (failure to include essential
    terms prevents recognition of parties' obligations); West Caldwell
    v. Caldwell, 
    26 N.J. 9
    , 24-25 (1958) (intent of parties could not
    be determined from vague terms).
    "The mere anticipation of a written memorialization of an
    oral   agreement   does   not   as   a    matter   of   law   vitiate   an oral
    contract if    the elements of       a contract are       contained     in   the
    oral agreement."     McBarron v. Kipling Woods, L.L.C., 
    365 N.J. Super. 114
    , 116 (App. Div. 2004).          Parties may contract orally and
    be bound by that agreement, but the plaintiff must show that the
    16                                 A-5664-14T3
    parties agreed upon all of the terms and if so, whether they
    intended an obligation to arise only on the execution of a formal
    writing.    Trs. of First Presbyterian Church in Newark v. Howard
    Co.-Jewelers, 
    22 N.J. Super. 494
    , 502 (App. Div. 1952), aff'd 
    12 N.J. 410
     (1953); see also McBarron, 
    supra,
     
    365 N.J. Super. at
    116-
    17. Whether an oral agreement was intended not to bind the parties
    until a written contract was executed is a matter of intent
    determined in large part by a credibility evaluation of witnesses.
    McBarron, 
    supra,
     
    365 N.J. Super. at 117
    .
    Forbearance   from    legal    action    is   well    recognized      as   a
    detriment     sufficient     to      support       a      contract,        i.e.,
    consideration.   Onorato Constr., Inc. v. Eastman Constr. Co., 
    312 N.J. Super. 565
    , 571 (App. Div. 1998).             Even where it is not
    directly stated as consideration, it may exist by implication.
    
    Ibid.
     (citation omitted).
    III.
    The jury, based no doubt on its conclusions regarding the
    credibility of the witnesses, found Krill and IDT entered into an
    enforceable   agreement.     Krill's       testimony,     if   believed,   when
    joined with other circumstances in the case, easily supports a
    judgment in Krill's favor.        We accept this evidence as true, and
    give him the benefit of inferences which can be reasonably and
    17                                A-5664-14T3
    legitimately drawn therefrom.   Filqueiras, supra, 
    426 N.J. Super. at 456
    .
    In support of its position, IDT focuses on Krill's statement
    on cross-examination that he had not agreed to release defendant
    from any hostile claims during the July 30, 2008 meeting. That,
    however, was not his statement on direct.     Krill was apparently
    believed in his direct testimony, and the jury disregarded his
    one-word response to a leading question on cross-examination.        At
    the time of the trial, Krill was in his seventies, and had
    struggled with his health.   Whether for this or other reasons, the
    jury chose to disregard his one-word answer in cross-examination.
    In our view, reasonable minds can differ as to whether
    forbearance from suit was an expressly agreed upon term.        Thus,
    the JNOV should not have been granted.     See 
    ibid.
        Furthermore,
    the jury knew that in the years since the agreement was reached,
    Krill did not file any other lawsuit against IDT.      That the issue
    of Krill's forbearance from filing a discrimination suit was not
    clearly spelled out as a term did not invalidate the agreement
    overall.
    In Satellite Entertainment Center, Inc., 
    supra,
     
    347 N.J. Super. at 270, 276
    , this court upheld a jury verdict for the
    defendant on his counterclaim, finding that a contract for the
    sale of his business to the plaintiff was sufficiently specific.
    18                            A-5664-14T3
    There, the defendant leased restaurant space from the plaintiff,
    and the plaintiff allegedly promised to pay the defendant $175,000
    for his business if he vacated by the end of 1995 because he had
    other plans for the space.    
    Id. at 272-73
    .     The defendant complied
    but the plaintiff did not pay.            
    Id. at 273
    .    On appeal, the
    plaintiff argued, inter alia, that a contract for the sale of the
    business should have been invalidated for lack of specificity
    concerning the terms.    
    Id. at 276
    .
    We found the basic terms were clear, including the firm price
    of $175,000, and the description of the defendant's business assets
    being   purchased,   which   would    have   included   tangible   assets,
    inventory and good will.     
    Id. at 276
    .      The fact that the parties
    did not itemize the inventory to be turned over was immaterial,
    particularly in light of the fact that the plaintiff was most
    interested in the defendant vacating the property before a certain
    date.    
    Ibid.
       The court found ample evidence in the record to
    support the verdict, and found that the trial turned almost
    entirely on credibility issues.           Satellite Entm't Ctr., Inc.,
    
    supra,
     
    347 N.J. Super. at 270
    .
    In like manner, here there was sufficient evidence for the
    jury to conclude that Krill and Jonas agreed Krill would not sue
    IDT.    Although the scope of the release was not specifically
    explained, IDT was certainly aware and the jury knew that Johnson
    19                            A-5664-14T3
    had sent a letter on June 26, 2008, referring to potential claims
    by Krill against IDT.   The letter also mentioned IDT's failure to
    pay Krill a severance package similar to those paid to others when
    they separated from the company.
    The testimony and the record established sufficient evidence
    of a mutual understanding regarding Krill's severance, including
    that he would not sue IDT if he were paid a settlement.         And
    certainly, IDT could not deny that it paid Krill $250,000 per year
    for four years.   The reasonable inference to be drawn from this
    testimony is that the agreement existed, and that it included
    Krill's forbearance.
    IDT also argues the parties did not reach agreement over
    IDT's attempt to define the scope of the release, that they
    continued to negotiate the release term, and ultimately never
    agreed upon a final version of the document exchanged by Johnson
    and IDT.   Defendant cites to an August 26, 2008 proposed written
    agreement from IDT to Krill which included release provisions that
    were outright rejected by Krill.      That Johnson sent a draft
    agreement to Schwell that did not include a release provision is
    immaterial, assuming that the parties were bound by their earlier
    oral agreement, a finding the jury reached.
    Johnson, in unqualified testimony, stated that Krill entered
    into an agreement, the essential terms of which were reached by
    20                         A-5664-14T3
    July 30, 2008, and that his subsequent discussions with Schwell
    and Greenstein were efforts to attempt to memorialize the agreement
    in writing.         Since Greenstein did not testify, that testimony
    stood unrefuted.       The jury resolved any question regarding whether
    an enforceable oral agreement existed as of July 30, 2008, in
    favor of Krill.
    The     jury    knew   that   IDT    paid       Krill    $1 million      of    the
    $2.5 million owed even though Johnson and Schwell were unable to
    convert the oral agreement into a signed, written contract.                        Krill
    acknowledged that the lawyers would finalize the terms during his
    July 30 meeting with Jonas.        The jury, however, was free to credit
    other portions of Krill's testimony, in addition to Johnson's.                       At
    the same time, the jury likely found Courter and Jonas not credible
    based   on   their     testimony   that       was    contradicted       by   evidence
    presented by Krill.         Courter's statement that the company enters
    into written agreements with executives was contradicted by both
    Krill and Jonas.         Jonas' testimony contradicted Johnson's and
    Krill's testimony on the subject of whether Jonas spoke with
    Johnson    and   confirmed    to   him    the       terms    of   the   $2.5 million
    settlement.
    Thus, when drawing all inferences in favor of plaintiff,
    there is sufficient evidence for the jury to have found that Krill
    and Jonas orally agreed on the terms of the release and were not
    21                                   A-5664-14T3
    further negotiating those terms.     Defendant was properly denied a
    new trial and JNOV.
    IV.
    Defendant also contends that no contract was reached between
    the parties because they did not agree on the scope of Krill's
    employment, and IDT is entitled either to JNOV or a new trial.
    Jonas made clear through his deposition testimony that, as part
    of the agreement, Krill would be available "for any help we might
    need that he was in a position to provide."           Jonas further
    acknowledged in his direct testimony at trial that it "was sort
    of understood that he would you know report personally to me, and
    if there was something you know that he had a special talent that
    he could do or something like I found for him, I – I would – I
    would have him do that, but there – there wasn't." Krill testified
    in a similar manner, that he would be "available for the company
    for the next four years, whatever they need from me."      The jury
    was free to credit Krill's testimony and Jonas' testimony on this
    term, while discrediting Jonas' argument that he never reached an
    agreement with Krill.   After all, Krill was paid $1 million by
    defendant over four years without a written agreement specifying
    what "being available" specifically meant.
    Certainly "available for the company" is vague.    But IDT did
    not present any complaints regarding Krill's failure to perform,
    22                            A-5664-14T3
    in fact, IDT continued to pay Krill the $250,000 per year for four
    years.      There was no dispute regarding the specificity of the term
    until this lawsuit was filed.          Accordingly, not only was there
    sufficient evidence for the jury to find for Krill, no miscarriage
    of justice occurred which warranted a new trial.
    V.
    Lastly, IDT contends that it is entitled to a new trial
    because the evidence established that the parties did not intend
    to be bound by their July 30 meeting.             IDT further asserts that
    the parties only intended to continue to negotiate and enter into
    a written contract, and that if that final step was not taken, it
    was because of a material disagreement in terms.
    As previously noted, parties may contract orally and be bound
    by   such    an   oral   agreement,   so   long   as   the   parties   seeking
    enforcement can demonstrate all essential terms were agreed upon,
    and that it was not understood that any obligation would arise
    only on the execution of a formal writing.               See Trs. of First
    Presbyterian Church in Newark, supra, 
    22 N.J. Super. at 502
    ; see
    also McBarron, 
    supra,
     
    365 N.J. Super. at 117
    .
    In McBarron, 
    supra,
     
    365 N.J. Super. at 115-16
    , we reversed
    the trial court's grant of summary judgment in favor of a seller
    who withdrew from an agreement, finding that an issue of material
    fact was raised concerning whether the seller intended to be bound
    23                               A-5664-14T3
    by an oral contract of sale for real estate.                    In McBarron, the
    buyers, a husband and wife, brought an action to enforce an oral
    contract to purchase a lot on which they intended to build a
    home.      
    Id. at 115, 118
    .     The buyers claimed an oral agreement to
    purchase the property for $185,000 was formed during telephone
    conversations with Barry Jost, who was representing the seller-
    defendant.      
    Id. at 118
    .          The telephone conversations were the
    culmination of a long course of negotiations.                  
    Id. at 117
    .        Jost
    called the husband and told him that the purchase price of the lot
    was $185,000, which the husband accepted.               He then asked if the
    transaction      was     a   "done      deal,"    to   which       Jost      replied,
    "definitely."     
    Id. at 118
    .         Jost told the husband that he and his
    wife were "like family" and that the seller's attorney would "draw
    up"   an    agreement.       
    Ibid.
         Before    the   end    of     the    telephone
    conversation, Jost assured him that "the deal was done."                    McBarron,
    
    supra,
     
    365 N.J. Super. at 118
    .            Four days later, Jost called the
    husband and advised him that a builder-friend had offered $190,000
    for the lot, but did not attempt to renege, acknowledging that
    they "had a deal" and Jost would "honor it."                   
    Ibid.
           Jost added
    that he had explained to his friend that the husband and wife were
    the "contractual owners" of the property.                    
    Ibid.
         The husband
    tape-recorded     the    conversation,        during   which    Jost       repeatedly
    confirmed that they had a deal.           
    Id. at 118-19
    .       Jost later called
    24                                   A-5664-14T3
    the husband "to renege on the agreement" because he had received
    a significantly higher offer by a corporate entity.           
    Id. at 118
    .   The buyers filed an action to enforce the agreement.    
    Id. at 115, 119
    .
    We   said   that "the   mere   anticipation   of   a   written
    memorialization of an oral agreement," provided that all the
    elements of a contract are present, "does not as a matter of law
    vitiate an oral contract."     McBarron, 
    supra,
     
    365 N.J. Super. at 116
    .    The buyers' proofs, if credited by a trier of fact, would
    support by clear and convincing evidence a finding that the parties
    had entered into an oral contract for the sale of the lot.     
    Id. at 119
    .
    The controlling question in this litigation was whether Krill
    and Jonas entered into a binding oral contract on July 30, 2008,
    or whether they expected and intended not to be bound by the terms
    of their discussion unless and until a written agreement was
    drafted.    In fact, the jury was instructed that there must have
    been "a meeting of the minds" in order to bind the parties.        The
    jury weighed the evidence, and found for Krill on the issue.
    As the judge acknowledged in rendering her decision both on
    the motions for directed verdict, JNOV, and a new trial, the jury
    reached its decision based on credibility.      It is apparent from
    their decision that the jurors believed Krill and his attorney
    25                           A-5664-14T3
    Johnson.     Jonas' credibility may have been diminished in light of
    the email from Greenstein to Johnson confirming that IDT was
    responsible for a $1.5 million payment to Krill, in addition to
    the   four   $250,000   a   year   payments   he   would   receive.     These
    circumstances supported Krill and his attorney's testimony, and
    seriously undercut that of IDT's representatives.
    Thus, no manifest injustice resulted from the jury's verdict.
    To    the   contrary,   substantial    evidence    demonstrated   that     IDT
    intended to pay Krill $2.5 million and may have done so sooner,
    had it not been negatively impacted by the 2008 financial crisis.
    Accordingly, IDT has failed to meet the standard for a new trial,
    and the judge's decision was therefore proper.
    Affirmed.
    26                              A-5664-14T3