Borase v. M/A Com, Inc.

171 F.R.D. 10, 37 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 428, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4773, 1997 WL 180292
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedApril 9, 1997
DocketCivil Action No. 94-10407-MLW
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 171 F.R.D. 10 (Borase v. M/A Com, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Borase v. M/A Com, Inc., 171 F.R.D. 10, 37 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 428, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4773, 1997 WL 180292 (D. Mass. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON PLAINTIFF VIJAY BORASE’S MOTION TO COMPEL DEPOSITION TESTIMONY BY J KEEMIT Eludí-FIELD AND JAMES W. SULLIVAN (#52)

COLLINGS, United States Magistrate Judge.1

I. Introduction

Plaintiff Vijay Borase seeks to compel the defendant M/A COM to produce two witnesses, J. Kermit Birchfield and James W. Sullivan, to respond to certain questions at deposition as to which they were previously instructed not to answer on the grounds of privilege. At his two prior depositions, Mr. Birchfield, former Senior Vice-President, Corporate Secretary and General Counsel of M/A COM, was instructed by his attorney not to respond to questions regarding conversations that he had with other M/A COM senior managerial employees, specifically James W. Sullivan, the Director of Human Resources, Richard Hale, Mr. Borase’s immediate supervisor, Allan Rayfield, President and Chief Operating Officer, Thomas Vandersliee, Chairman of M/A COM’s Board of Directors, Robert Glaudel, Senior Vice President of Human Resources, Burt Widener, Vice President and General Manager of the Interconnect Products Division of M/A COM 2 and James Morton, Chairman of M/A COM’s Compensation Committee, premised upon an assertion of the attorney-client privilege. During his deposition, Mr. Sullivan was also directed not to answer questions aimed at probing his conversations with Mr. Birchfield.3

Mr. Borase contends that during these conversations, Mr. Birchfield was acting as a businessman, not a lawyer, and thus was not entitled to invoke the attorney-client pnvilege\ M^A C0M holds the eontrary view> arguklg Mr. Birchfield was acting as an attorney End tliEt th© subject conversEtions are clearly Protected b/ tbe attorney-client privilege.

II. The Facts

The relevant background facts of this case, for present purposes at least, are not in dispute. The plaintiff was employed by M/A COM from February, 1985 until the time of his discharge on January 20, 1993.4 When he was terminated, Mr. Borase served as Vice President of M/A COM’s Government Sector, having risen through the ranks over the years from the position of Operations Manager to the position of General Manager and ultimately to the highest position in his division. At least through the first seven years of his employment with the defendant, the plaintiff received excellent performance evaluations which resulted in certain awards of stock units and stock options.

Mr. Borase’s immediate supervisor, Richard Hale, made the decision to fire the plaintiff after consulting with M/A COM’s President and Chief Operating Officer, Allan Rayfield, and thereafter advised the plaintiff of the termination on January 20, 1993. The defendant’s articulated reason for discharging Mr. Borase was his purported lack of commitment to the matrix management organization structure which the company was implementing. Disbelieving this explanation, the plaintiff contends that M/A COM in fact fired him on account of his race, color and national origin.

[12]*12After being informed of Ms discharge, Mr. Borase spoke with James Sullivan, the Director of Human Services at M/A COM. The two talked about the plaintiff executing a separation agreement providing for severance pay and other benefits, and Mr. Sullivan agreed to provide Mr. Borase with a preliminary version. Mr. Sullivan undertook to draft the agreement, which was then reviewed by Mr. Birchfield before being presented to the plaintiff. Thereafter, negotiations with respect to the proposed agreement ensued. By February 22, 1993, Mr. Borase had retained counsel, the law firm of Edwards & Angelí, to represent him in the process, while M/A COM claims to have relied upon Mr. Birchfield, its General Counsel. Attorneys from Edwards & Angelí, Gerald Hendrick and John Houlihan, dealt with Mr. Birchfield in the following months, although Mr. Borase and Mr. Sullivan also spoke directly about the separation agreement as well as other issues. During the course of the negotiations and in connection with them, Mr. Birchfield spoke with various members of M/A COM’s management personnel.

Pursuant to the terms of M/A COM’s Restricted Treasury Stock Plan, Mr. Borase contends that he is entitled to twenty-five thousand shares of stock based upon the stock having reached a trigger price in May of 1993. During the negotiation process, the plaintiff discussed this claim with Mr. Sullivan while attorneys from Edwards & Angelí discussed it with Mr. Birchfield. M/A COM’s General Counsel discussed Mr. Borase’s restricted treasury stock claim with several M/A COM officials. The company’s position as articulated by both Mr. Sullivan and Mr. Birchfield was that the plaintiff had no legal right to the shares of stock, either under the terms of the Plan or pursuant to the proposed settlement agreement.

Following January 20, 1993, the plaintiff continued to receive his salary and other benefits from M/A COM, although he did not have to report to the office. In late May of that year Mr. Borase accepted a position with a company named Amphenol Corporation; he began working for Amphenol on June 3,1993. Approximately six weeks later, Mr. Borase filed a complaint with the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission alleging that M/A COM had discriminated against him by discharging him from his employment on the basis of his race, color and national origin.

At some point after the plaintiff began working for Amphenol; M/A COM notified him that it was forfeiting 6,322 shares of stock previously awarded, but not yet paid, to him under the M/A COM Key Employee Stock Unit Plan. According to the defendant’s Long-Term Key Contributor Performance Incentive Plan, an employee’s outstanding stock units under the Plan are to be forfeited if that employee competes with M/A COM within one year after leaving the company’s employ. M/A COM takes the position that Mr. Borase violated the non-competition clause by commencing employment with Am-phenol and thus his stock units were subject to forfeiture. The plaintiff asserts that the defendant’s purported justification for forfeiting the stock was but a sham and that MA/COM purportedly forfeited the stock on account of Mr. Borase’s race, color and national origin as well as to retaliate against him for filing his discrimination claim with the MCAD and the EEOC.

Under the Plan, the Compensation Committee of M/ACOM’s Board of Directors is empowered to decide whether a former employee’s shares are to be forfeited. In this instance, Robert Glaudel, the company’s Vice President of Human Resources, bore the responsibility of gathering information about the relevant circumstances and thereafter making a presentation to the Committee with respect to the forfeiture of Mr. Borase’s stock units. Mr. Glaudel garnered the requisite information essentially by speaking with Burt Widener, M/A COM’s Vice President and General Manager of Interconnect Products Division, and thereafter recommended to the Compensation Committee that the plaintiffs stock units be forfeited. Mr. Birchfield neither made any presentation to the Compensation Committee nor was he present during Mr. Glaudel’s presentations. He did, during this period, speak with James Morton, the Chairman of the Compensation [13]*13Committee, with respect to the potential forfeiture of the plaintiffs stock units.

On or about February 28,1994, Mr.

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171 F.R.D. 10, 37 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 428, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4773, 1997 WL 180292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borase-v-ma-com-inc-mad-1997.