GLN COMPLIANCE v. Aviation Manual Solutions

203 P.3d 595, 2008 WL 4592371
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 16, 2008
Docket07CA1563
StatusPublished

This text of 203 P.3d 595 (GLN COMPLIANCE v. Aviation Manual Solutions) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
GLN COMPLIANCE v. Aviation Manual Solutions, 203 P.3d 595, 2008 WL 4592371 (Colo. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

203 P.3d 595 (2008)

GLN COMPLIANCE GROUP, INC., Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
AVIATION MANUAL SOLUTIONS, LLC; RVSM Solutions, LLC; Misty D. McCumsey; J. Kent Hegwood, Jr.; and Jerry Hegwood, Defendants-Appellees.

No. 07CA1563.

Colorado Court of Appeals, Div. II.

October 16, 2008.

*596 Starrs Mihm & Caschette, LLP, Elizabeth A. Starrs, Daniel A. Wartell, Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellant.

John C. Hugger, Evergreen, Colorado, for Defendants-Appellees Aviation Manual Solutions, LLC, and Misty D. McCumsey.

Silver & DeBoskey, P.C., Steven W. Kelly, Ruba M. Forno, Denver, Colorado, for Defendants-Appellees RVSM Solutions, LLC, J. Kent Hegwood, Jr., and Jerry Hegwood.

Opinion by Judge BERNARD.

Plaintiff, GLN Compliance Group, Inc., appeals the judgment of the trial court enforcing a settlement agreement between GLN and defendants, Aviation Manual Solutions, LLC, RVSM Solutions, LLC, Misty D. McCumsey, J. Kent Hegwood, and Jerry Hegwood. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.

I. Background

In April 2006, GLN sued defendants for allegedly misappropriating its trade secrets and other confidential and proprietary information. The trial court ordered the parties *597 to participate in alternative dispute resolution.

A mediation session was held in August 2006 before a retired judge who served as the mediator. After mediation discussions, the mediator asked the parties to make a record before a court reporter. The mediator began these proceedings by stating:

The record should reflect that the parties have previously sent me confidential settlement manuals and the like which I have reviewed, and I also spent a fair amount of time individually meeting with the parties here today in order to effectuate a settlement.
It's my understanding that we have one.... The record is for the purpose of getting this agreement on the record. A formal record will be prepared by counsel and then submitted and sent around for signatures and the like.

The attorneys for the parties then presented a summary of the agreement they had reached. At the conclusion of their presentation, the mediator asked the parties a series of questions designed to ensure that they understood the mediation agreement, that they had enough time to discuss it with their counsel, that no one had forced them to agree to it, and that GLN was "comfortable" with the mediation agreement.

At the end of the recorded session, the mediator engaged in the following exchange with one of the attorneys:

Mediator: [W]e have an agreement here, and counsel, you're going to be preparing this document and get it ready and send it around for signatures and the like?
Defendants' Attorney: I will circulate a draft as soon as I can get one prepared.
Mediator: Sure....

Shortly thereafter, defendants performed several of the obligations required by the mediation agreement, including sending GLN a settlement payment in the form of a check. One of the terms of the mediation agreement was that the check would be sent to GLN promptly after the mediation session, but that GLN would not negotiate the check until a written mediation agreement was signed. GLN negotiated the check before any agreement was signed.

In late September, there was the following exchange of e-mails between one of defendants' attorneys and GLN's mediation attorney concerning the written mediation agreement.

GLN's Mediation Attorney: Please send me an [electronic] version of the proposed settlement agreement so that [I may] make some proposed changes.
Defendants' Attorney: Here it is. (I understood from yesterday's e-mail that the form was approved with the one change to the attorneys' fees provision?)
GLN's Mediation Attorney: Oh, yeah. Thanks.
GLN's Mediation Attorney: The primary concern is to make it clear that GLN may seek to protect its proprietary information if your ... clients use such information in the future and may not transfer or convey any such information to third parties with impunity. That was my take.... It might be advisable to tone down the statement of the counterclaims against GLN, and I will attempt to do so.

GLN refused to sign the written mediation agreement. On the same day, without consulting its mediation attorney, GLN's president sent defendants' attorney a long letter, which contained profane and insulting passages. It began:

I reviewed the agreement you drafted for signature in regards the mediation.... What were YOU smoking? I am both disappointed and [outraged] at your conduct and the slanderous language used.
So [let's] cut to the chase. That will not be signed. Period. While you may have thought it [clever] to see how much you can screw you own clients over ... all you have done is succeeded in ensuring them a fast track to more civil and criminal issues, all of which I ... will continue to pursue regardless of your babbling and [the] diatribe you sent.

In October, GLN's mediation attorney moved to withdraw as GLN's counsel, citing irreconcilable differences with his client. GLN filed a written objection, in which it *598 stated that the case had reached a critical stage and the withdrawal of counsel could damage the parties' interests. GLN wrote, "A mediation session, which we thought was successful, was rendered unmanageable by opposing counsel and has been brought to a close." The court allowed GLN's mediation attorney to withdraw, and a new attorney entered his appearance for GLN.

Defendants filed a "Joint Motion to Enforce Settlement Agreement." The trial court held a hearing on the motion, at which GLN's president testified, and GLN's mediation attorney testified over GLN's objection. Among other arguments, GLN submitted that the mediation attorney's testimony was barred because the agreement reached at the mediation session had not been reduced to writing and signed by the parties, and because communications occurring at mediation sessions are "supposed to be confidential."

Defendants contended that GLN expressly agreed to the mediation agreement at the end of the mediation session, and this agreement was reflected by GLN's conduct afterward in accepting defendants' performance of elements of the mediation agreement. GLN responded that it did not agree to the written mediation agreement because it did not provide sufficient future protection for GLN's confidential information.

The trial court made findings of fact, including that GLN's mediation attorney had informed defendants' counsel that GLN had accepted the written mediation agreement; and that the sworn testimony of GLN's president at the hearing was not credible, and thus it was "not believed by the Court." The court then granted the motion to enforce the mediation agreement, concluding:

The [on-the-record] reading of the settlement agreement, together with the transcript, meets any requirement for a written document approved and accepted by the parties.

The trial court later ordered GLN to pay defendants' attorney fees under section 13-17-102, C.R.S.2008, because it found that its actions were vexatious.

II. The Mediation Privilege Created by Colorado's Dispute Resolution Act

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Bluebook (online)
203 P.3d 595, 2008 WL 4592371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gln-compliance-v-aviation-manual-solutions-coloctapp-2008.