Kent Arett v. Gardens Alive Farms LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 6, 2022
Docket21-3811
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kent Arett v. Gardens Alive Farms LLC (Kent Arett v. Gardens Alive Farms LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kent Arett v. Gardens Alive Farms LLC, (6th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 22a0145n.06

Case No. 21-3811

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

FILED Apr 06, 2022 ) KENT ARETT, DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED v. ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR ) THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF GARDENS ALIVE FARMS LLC, et al., ) OHIO Defendants-Appellees. ) )

Before: GUY, THAPAR, and READLER, Circuit Judges.

THAPAR, Circuit Judge. Kent Arett saved his company money, so he thought he was

entitled to a bonus. But he failed to follow the procedures he agreed to follow. When the company

denied him the bonus, he sued. The district court granted summary judgment. We affirm.

I.

Kent Arett was an executive at Gardens Alive, an Ohio direct-marketing company that sells

horticultural products. Before he joined the company, Arett enjoyed a career turning around

companies by cutting costs. He hoped to do the same at Gardens Alive.

A few years after starting, Arett was ready to slow down. So he approached the company’s

CEO, Eric Hamant, about a “phased retirement.” R. 27, Pg. ID 723. Arett wanted to reduce his

hours to three-quarter time. Hamant agreed. Case No. 21-3811, Arett v. Gardens Alive Farms LLC, et al.

A month later, Felix Cooper—the vice president and COO of Gardens Alive—approached

Arett about cutting his salary in half. But Arett refused to accept a lower base salary unless they

reduced his hours and modified his bonus structure. Specifically, he wanted his bonus to reflect

incentives for completing projects that saved the company significant money.

Negotiations ensued and eventually Cooper emailed Arett an offer letter memorializing the

details of their agreement. The letter referenced Arett’s reduced hours and noted that his existing

bonus structure would be replaced with a “variable bonus based on agreed upon results and

deadlines.” R. 27-8, Pg. ID 903. But it didn’t outline the exact bonus structure. Rather, it

explained the details would be provided “under separate cover.” Id.

In the body of the offer-letter email, Cooper said he was “agreeable” to the following

formula for calculating the bonus: 10% bonus calculated on the “first year savings” times three.

R. 27-9, Pg. ID 905. Equipment costs and Arett’s compensation for his time on the projects would

be subtracted before calculating the bonus. The email also detailed the particular projects on which

Arett would work.

But the email excluded one relevant input: a way to gauge “first year savings.” Instead,

Cooper said he would look to Arett for an “initial proposal” on the “key metrics” used for the

savings calculation. And Cooper said he was confident the two of them could work out “in good

faith” the details of “how that calculation will be made.” R. 27-9, Pg. ID 905.

Arett responded to the email with two words: “I agree.” R. 27-9, Pg. ID 904. But he never

submitted an initial proposal on the key metrics. Nor did Arett ever bring up a bonus again—that

is, not until after he was fired almost a year later.

After his termination, Arett asked about his bonus. Cooper offered him a little over

$12,000, about 11.5% of his annual salary. Arett wasn’t happy with the offer; he believed he’d

-2- Case No. 21-3811, Arett v. Gardens Alive Farms LLC, et al.

saved the company over $3 million that year alone. Thus, he thought he was entitled to a more-

than-$500,000 bonus under the formula in Cooper’s email. But Gardens Alive disagreed,

believing the parties had not reached a meeting of the minds on the bonus structure.

Having reached an impasse over his bonus, Arett sued Gardens Alive in federal court for

age discrimination, breach of contract, promissory estoppel, and unjust enrichment. The district

court granted Gardens Alive summary judgment on all claims. Arett appeals all but his age-

discrimination claims. The parties agree that Ohio law applies to the remaining claims.

II.

Start with breach of contract. Arett argues that Gardens Alive breached their contract by

refusing to pay Arett a bonus based on the formula proposed in Cooper’s email (10% of the “first

year savings” times three). R. 27-9, Pg. ID 905. Gardens Alive doesn’t dispute that it agreed to

do so. But under these circumstances, that’s not enough.

To form a binding contract, the parties must not only agree on the “essential terms,” but

those terms must be “reasonably certain and clear.” Bank of N.Y. Mellon v. Rhiel, 122 N.E.3d

1219, 1225 (Ohio 2018); see also 1 Richard A. Lord, Williston on Contracts § 4:21 (4th ed.). This

latter requirement enables courts to craft appropriate remedies based on the parties’ intent as

manifested by the written words of the contract. See Westfield Ins. Co. v. Galatis, 797 N.E.2d

1256, 1261 (Ohio 2003); First Nat’l Bank of Omaha v. iBeam Sols., LLC, 61 N.E.3d 740, 762

(Ohio Ct. App. 2016).

So the question here is whether “first year savings” is reasonably certain and clear such

that the district court (or a reasonable jury) could craft an appropriate remedy based on the

agreement. On one hand, every middle schooler with a piggy bank knows what “savings” means.

And the term is readily defined in any dictionary. See, e.g., Savings, Webster's New World College

-3- Case No. 21-3811, Arett v. Gardens Alive Farms LLC, et al.

Dictionary 1194 (3d ed. 1996) (“any reduction in expense, time, labor, etc.”). But under Ohio law,

the intent of the parties as manifested by the written agreement trumps a term’s typical meaning.

See Galatis, 797 N.E.2d at 1261.

And here, the parties’ discussion of “savings” shows they meant for it to have a particular

meaning—which they intended to agree on later. Cooper’s offer letter to Arett expressly stated

that the details of the bonus would be provided separately. And Cooper’s accompanying email

said that he’d look to Arett for an “initial proposal” on the key metrics to measure “savings,” and

the two of them would “work out in good faith” exactly how the calculation would be made. R. 27-

9, Pg. ID 905. In this way, the parties acknowledged that they were temporarily leaving the

meaning of “savings” undefined. So rather than agreeing on a “reasonably certain and clear” term,

they agreed to negotiate the term’s meaning in the future. Rhiel, 122 N.E.3d at 1225.

In other words, the parties made an “agreement to agree.” M.J. DiCorpo, Inc. v. Sweeney,

634 N.E.2d 203, 207–08 (Ohio 1994); see also Omri Ben-Shahar, “Agreeing to Disagree”: Filling

Gaps in Deliberately Incomplete Contracts, 2004 Wis. L. Rev. 389, 395 (describing how parties

sometimes “affirmatively acknowledge the indefiniteness of their agreement and state their intent

(or hope) that further negotiations will enable them to reach a more complete agreement”). But

agreements to agree are rarely enforceable. That’s because the parties’ intent controls the

contractual meaning. And when the parties intend to leave undefined an essential term subject to

further negotiations, no binding contract is formed. See Sweeney, 634 N.E.2d at 208.

That’s exactly what happened here. “Savings” is an essential term of the bonus agreement.

After all, it’s the main input for the proposed formula. And the parties intended to negotiate the

metrics that would give “savings” meaning later. Given these undisputed facts, no reasonable jury

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