DeSimone v. Danaher Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedNovember 26, 2019
Docket1:17-cv-05232
StatusUnknown

This text of DeSimone v. Danaher Corporation (DeSimone v. Danaher Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeSimone v. Danaher Corporation, (N.D. Ill. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

RONALD DESIMONE, ) ) Plaintiff, ) Case No. 17-cv-5232 ) v. ) Judge Robert M. Dow, Jr. ) DANAHER CORPORATION, et al., ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

For the reasons stated below, Defendants’ motion to enforce settlement [85] is denied. This case is set for further status hearing on December 13, 2019 at 9:30 a.m. The parties are directed to meet and confer and to file on the docket no later than December 10, 2019 a joint status report indicating (1) how they propose to proceed with the parallel Illinois and Michigan cases (including whether one will be stayed or dismissed) and (2) if they propose to proceed here in Illinois, a detailed plan for any further discovery and dispositive motions and whether they have mutual interest in trying to resume settlement discussions to avoid further litigation costs. I. Background The issue before the Court illustrates some of the challenges associated with bringing hotly contested litigation to a close. Plaintiff Ronald Desimone has not worked for Defendants since October 2015. Following his termination, Plaintiff filed charges of discrimination against Defendants with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in April 2016. The parties agreed to mediate the dispute at the EEOC’s Chicago offices. The mediation lasted three days in October, November, and December 2016 and involved Plaintiff, his attorney, two attorneys for Defendants, plus a corporate representative for Defendants and, of course, the mediator. On the first day of the mediation, the parties signed a “Confidentiality Agreement,” which provided (among other things) that “[i]f a settlement is reached by all the parties, the agreement shall be reduced to writing and when signed shall be binding upon all parties to the agreement.” As the Court’s prior twenty-four page memorandum opinion and order [68] sets out in detail, the parties began to converge on the terms of a final agreement on the afternoon of the third

day of the mediation, December 1, 2016. The testimony at the evidentiary hearing confirms that agreement on the monetary terms was reached while Plaintiff was present, but that the lawyers went back and forth on some non-monetary terms late into the afternoon, after Plaintiff (unbeknownst to even his own attorney) had left for the day. Plaintiff’s attorney had taken a hand at drafting a document entitled “Binding Term Sheet,” which included at the bottom signature lines for Plaintiff and Defendants’ corporate representative (as principals) and the EEOC Mediator (as a witness). At 4:17 p.m., Plaintiff’s counsel conveyed the first version of the term sheet, along with an email indicating his belief that he had “captured the material terms and left room to add the other standard terms that would normally accompany such an agreement.” A little more than

an hour later, counsel for Defendants responded by email with “a revised term sheet” that included (among other changes) the addition of a Michigan choice of law and venue provision and retained the same signature lines. About half an hour later, Plaintiff’s counsel sent the final version of the day in redline, indicating some concern about the choice of law and venue provision but stating that “[a]ll other looks good to us and we will work with client tomorrow to have signed.” By that time, it was apparent that Plaintiff did not intend to return to the mediation, so Plaintiff’s lawyer and one of the lawyers for Defendants signed the term sheet at a random spot on the back page. None of the actual signature lines—for Plaintiff, Defendants’ corporate representative, and the EEOC mediator—were signed. Almost three years later, the dispute remains unresolved. That state of affairs has spawned two lawsuits, one here and the other in the Western District of Michigan, the history of which is spelled out in the Court’s prior decision and will not be repeated here. In essence, Plaintiff claims that the EEOC process did not yield a final settlement and asserts that he would like to litigate the matter. Defendants say that Plaintiff suffers from “buyer’s remorse” and ask that the Court find

that the signed term sheet constitutes a binding and enforceable settlement. After the Court concluded that it could not resolve the matter on the basis of briefing alone, it held an evidentiary hearing at which all of the actors present at the mediation except for the mediator herself testified. For the reasons explained below, the Court concludes that there was no meeting of the minds on all of the essential terms of the proposed agreement and thus the motion to enforce settlement must be denied. Settling hotly contested cases such as this one is arduous work. Perhaps none of those involved anticipated needing three days to reach a resolution of the dispute arising out of an employment relationship that lasted less than a year. And the evidence is clear that nobody—not

even Plaintiff’s own lawyer—realized that Plaintiff was not returning to the mediation late in the afternoon of its third day, and instead had taken a train home after leaving to attend a meeting. One reason that mediators (and judges) require the presence (or at least the availability by phone) of principals is to obtain input at critical junctures, and in this unfortunate instance Plaintiff was not available to provide either input or potentially a decision on the terms that had been proposed at the end of the third day of negotiations. On the basis of the parties’ written submissions, including the documentary record, and the testimony elicited at the evidentiary hearing, the Court finds that the following state of affairs existed as of 6:00 p.m. on December 1, 2016:  Counsel for both parties had negotiated a “Binding Term Sheet” that they believed contained the material terms of an agreement;

 The non-monetary terms of the proposed agreement were negotiated throughout the last day of the mediation and it took approximately 90 minutes of back-and-forth on redlined drafts before they were fixed on the Term Sheet;

 Given that negotiating process and the revision of proposed terms, any offers made by either side had been met with counteroffers until the final Term Sheet was signed at the end of the mediation session, and only that document constituted a live offer when the session concluded;

 The non-monetary terms were significant and thus material;

 The lawyers on both sides felt that the monetary and non-monetary terms were fair and would recommend that their clients accept them;

 Plaintiff’s counsel had flagged one term (the Michigan choice of law and venue provision) that he thought might be problematic;

 Plaintiff had left the mediation hours before the final draft Term Sheet was available;

 As of the end of the day, the lawyers for Defendants knew that Plaintiff had left the mediation prior to the final draft of the Term Sheet becoming available;

 Plaintiff had never seen any of the provisions of the Term Sheet, much less all of them, on the final day of the mediation;

 Counsel for Defendants knew that Plaintiff had not been apprised of the contents of the Term Sheet;

 None of the principals signed the Term Sheet, either at the mediation or at any other time;

 The mediator never signed the Term Sheet;

 A lawyer for each side did sign the Term Sheet, but not on the lines included for their principals;

 The Confidentiality Agreement executed at the outset of the litigation contemplated that any settlement would be reduced to writing and signed, but it did not specify whether the signatures would be by the parties or their lawyers;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
DeSimone v. Danaher Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/desimone-v-danaher-corporation-ilnd-2019.