JONES LANG LASHALL AMERICAS, INC v. JAFFE

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 22, 2024
Docket2:23-cv-04100
StatusUnknown

This text of JONES LANG LASHALL AMERICAS, INC v. JAFFE (JONES LANG LASHALL AMERICAS, INC v. JAFFE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
JONES LANG LASHALL AMERICAS, INC v. JAFFE, (E.D. Pa. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

JONES LANG LASALLE AMERICAS, : CIVIL ACTION INC. : : v. : NO. 23-4100 : PAIGE JAFFE, SQUARE RETAIL : CONSULTANTS LLC :

MEMORANDUM

MURPHY, J. July 22, 2024 This case is about a bitter business divorce, with claims and counterclaims ranging from breach of contract to misappropriation of trade secrets to Title VII discrimination. The main defendant, Ms. Jaffe, is a former business associate of plaintiff’s. She demanded a jury trial for all the claims and counterclaims. But the plaintiff points to a jury waiver provision in one of several agreements between plaintiff and defendant. Although this case is still in discovery, plaintiff moved to strike the jury demand, and we don’t mind resolving the dispute now. There is no concern about whether the jury waiver was knowing and voluntary. Rather, the question is the reach of the jury waiver — does it encompass all the claims and counterclaims or just some? We answer this question on a claim-by-claim basis by focusing on the connections between the agreements at issue and the relevance of the agreements to the various claims. And at all times we keep the burden on the movant to show a clear waiver of the claim at issue, because we generally presume against a waiver of the important right to a jury trial. We grant JLL’s motion in part and deny it in part as explained below and summarized in the conclusion. I. Factual allegations JLL is a commercial real estate company that offers various services including commercial, retail, and industrial real estate brokerage and property management services. DI 33 at 3. In February 2019, JLL’s Philadelphia office hired Ms. Jaffe as the managing director of retail leasing. Id. at 4. At that time, Ms. Jaffe signed a promissory note for a $650,000 up-front

loan from JLL. Id. at 5. The promissory note states that the loan is to be forgiven at a rate of six percent per dollar of cash collected and attributed to her from 2019 through 2026. Id. According to the terms of the promissory note, Ms. Jaffe was required to repay any unforgiven portion of the loan by December 31, 2026. DI 16 at 17. Later, Ms. Jaffe was reclassified as an independent contractor; she signed an independent contractor agreement (ICA) and the note was amended to reflect the new agreement.1 Id. The ICA included the following jury waiver provision: “The parties knowingly and willingly waive a trial by jury in any dispute arising out of or in any way related to this Agreement.” DI 33-2 at 6. Further, the ICA outlined several terms for Ms. Jaffe and JLL’s client-contractor relationship, including a confidentiality provision, a requirement to return documents and property, and a non-solicitation provision. The ICA also contained an integration clause stating that the ICA — along with Exhibit A — embodies the entire agreement. Exhibit A in turn outlines Ms. Jaffe’s compensation and references the $650,000 loan subject to the terms of the promissory note. After Ms. Jaffe began work at JLL, accounts of the relationship differ dramatically. JLL

alleges that Ms. Jaffe failed to meet her performance metrics, formed her own business, Square, to compete with JLL, and stole confidential information. Ms. Jaffe tells a very different story

1 Neither party argues that this reclassification is relevant in analyzing the present motion. where JLL undercut her commissions, discriminated against her because of her sex, and made working conditions intolerable. The result is this litigation and the following claims and counterclaims: e Count I: Breach of Contract (ICA) e Count II: Breach of Contract (Promissory Note) e Count III: Breach of Duty of Loyalty e Count IV: Unjust Enrichment e Count V: Unfair Competition e Count VI: Conversion e Count VII: Tortious Interference (against Square) e Count VIH: DTSA (Defend Trade Secrets Act) e Count IX: PUTSA (Pennsylvania Uniform Trade Secrets Act) e Count X: Civil Conspiracy e Counterclaim One: Sex Discrimination under Title VII e Counterclaim Two: Retaliation under Title VII e Counterclaim Three — Six: Sex Discrimination and Retaliation under the PHRA and PFPO e Counterclaim Seven: Forgiveness of Note e Counterclaim Eight: Judgement related to Sales Commission e Counterclaim Nine: Breach of Contract relating to Note e Counterclaim Ten: Conversion Il. Motion to strike defendant’s jury demand? JLL initiated this lawsuit in October 2023 and, in June 2024, filed an amended complaint adding a claim of breach of duty of loyalty. See DI 1; DI 33. Ms. Jaffe filed her answer and counterclaims, demanding a jury trial on all claims and counterclaims. DI 16; DI 38 (amended answer incorporating counterclaims). JLL filed a motion to strike the jury demand arguing that Ms. Jaffe waived her jury rights by signing the ICA agreement. DI 24. Both parties agree that

? We appreciate that discovery pertaining to the underlying claims is ongoing. This type of motion could be decided closer to trial, but for the most part it appears ripe. In particular, at oral argument, the parties generally agreed that it would be premature for this court to express any opinion on Count X, Civil Conspiracy. So we will not. Similarly, if evidence is obtained during discovery that ought to change the outcome of this decision, either party may file a renewed motion no later than 14 days following the close of discovery.

Ms. Jaffe knowingly and voluntarily assented to the waiver. See DI 25 at 5. The dispute is the scope of the waiver — does it encompass all of JLL’s claims and Ms. Jaffe’s counterclaims too?3 A. The claims arising from the promissory note (claims II and IV; counterclaims seven and nine)

JLL advances two reasons why the note-related claims are covered by the waiver provision in the ICA agreement. First, JLL argues that the note expressly incorporates the conditions of the ICA agreement — including the waiver provision. DI 26 at 3. Second, JLL argues that even if the jury waiver is not expressly incorporated, the ICA’s waiver language covers disputes “in any way related to” the ICA, and the note is sufficiently related to the ICA to be encompassed by that language. DI 37 at 2. Ms. Jaffe responds that only the “conditions,” not the “terms,” of the ICA are incorporated into the note, and that the jury waiver is a “term.” DI 36 at 2. Additionally, Ms. Jaffe argues the waiver’s language is limited to claims related solely to the ICA agreement and does not, as JLL argues, encompass claims arising from the note — a separate agreement related to, but one step removed from, the ICA. See DI 25 at 6-7. B. JLL’s tortious interference claim against Square (claim VII)

The corporate entity Square was not party to the ICA. Nevertheless, JLL argues that under traditional agency principles, Jaffe was an agent of Square and thus her agreement may be imputed to Square. DI 24 at 11. Ms. Jaffe argues that Square was formed some three years after

3 Ms. Jaffe concedes that Counts I, III, IV (to the extent that the claim for unjust enrichment concerns the benefits acquired under the ICA not under the note), VI, and Counterclaims Eight and Ten are covered by the waiver. DI 25 at 5; DI 36 at 1. Ms. Jaffe signed the ICA, and even if agency were established, it would be improper to impute a jury waiver provision to a non-signatory. DI 25 at 12. C. JLL’s unfair competition and trade secrets claims (claims V, VIII, and IX) In essence, JLL argues that its unfair competition, DTSA, and PUTSA claims “relate to” the ICA because they are based in part on the terms of the agreement. See DI 24 at 9; DI 26 at 8.

For her part, Ms. Jaffe argues that the trade secrets claims rely on a duty not to tortiously misappropriate trade secrets that is independent of the ICA. DI 26 at 11. At oral argument, Ms.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Aetna Insurance v. Kennedy Ex Rel. Bogash
301 U.S. 389 (Supreme Court, 1937)
In Re City Of Philadelphia Litigation
158 F.3d 723 (Third Circuit, 1998)
Barry Belmont v. MB Investment Partners, Inc.
708 F.3d 470 (Third Circuit, 2013)
Tracinda Corp. v. Daimlerchrysler Ag
502 F.3d 212 (Third Circuit, 2007)
Brown v. Cushman & Wakefield, Inc.
235 F. Supp. 2d 291 (S.D. New York, 2002)
USX Corp. v. Prime Leasing Inc.
988 F.2d 433 (Third Circuit, 1993)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
JONES LANG LASHALL AMERICAS, INC v. JAFFE, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-lang-lashall-americas-inc-v-jaffe-paed-2024.