LINCARE HOLDINGS, INC. v. SHARON D. FORD

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedSeptember 30, 2020
Docket19-1758
StatusPublished

This text of LINCARE HOLDINGS, INC. v. SHARON D. FORD (LINCARE HOLDINGS, INC. v. SHARON D. FORD) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LINCARE HOLDINGS, INC. v. SHARON D. FORD, (Fla. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL

OF FLORIDA

SECOND DISTRICT

LINCARE HOLDINGS INC., ) ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) Case No. 2D19-1758 ) SHARON D. FORD, ) ) Appellee. ) )

Opinion filed September 30, 2020.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Hillsborough County; Paul L. Huey, Judge.

Kristin A. Norse, Stuart C. Markman, and Robert W. Ritsch, Of Counsel, of Kynes, Markman & Felman, P.A., Tampa, for Appellant.

Christopher D. Donovan of Roetzel & Andress, LPA, Naples, for Appellee.

CASE, Associate Senior Judge.

Lincare Holdings Inc. appeals from a final judgment partially entered in

favor of its former employee, Sharon Ford, in a four-count action she brought against

Lincare regarding her alleged contractual entitlement to an annual bonus amount for her

job performance in 2016. Among other reasons specific to individually claimed bonus amounts, the jury determined that Ms. Ford was not entitled to receive any payment for

2016 bonuses to which she might have otherwise been entitled because her

employment ended prior to the payment of those amounts. However, the trial court

granted Ms. Ford's motion for directed verdict related to this jury finding, and it

accordingly entered a judgment in the amount of $509,765.65 in her favor. This was

error because, under the factual and legal standards the trial court was required to

apply, Ms. Ford was not entitled to payment for these bonus amounts according to

Lincare's bonus policy. We therefore reverse the judgment entered in favor of Ms. Ford.

Ms. Ford worked in Lincare's in-house legal department as the director of

its mergers and acquisitions team. Her compensation package included both a salary

and an annual bonus. The bonus portion was based on a formula which gave Ms. Ford

a percentage of Lincare's pro forma revenue from its acquisitions over the past year.

Thus, the more money Lincare made from its acquisitions, the higher Ms. Ford's bonus

was for that year. This bonus structure was entirely unique to Ms. Ford at Lincare, and

she had individually contracted with the company's CEO for it. While the compensation

contract was renegotiated several times over the years, Ms. Ford's most recent

contract—the one now in dispute—was drafted in 2014 in an email exchange with

Shawn Schabel, who was the CEO of Lincare at that time. Mr. Schabel emailed Ms.

Ford the following terms:

Base of 130k Bonus plan to include respiratory at 1.85 proforma revenue No guaranteed quarterly tiers Bonus paid out annually KC employee to report to this position M/W/F/ in LNCR office from 8am – 5PM T/Thurs at home office from 8am – 5PM In 2016, Lincare completed two large, atypical transactions. In the first,

Lincare's parent company helped Lincare acquire a significantly larger corporation than

Lincare had ever acquired before. In the second, Lincare divested itself of a portion of

its company. Ms. Ford applied her usual bonus formula to these two transactions and

to other more typical ones that she had performed over the course of the year and

calculated that her total bonus for 2016 should be $1,013,678—an amount that was far

greater than past years due to the two atypical transactions. She submitted this amount

to Lincare, but Lincare refused to pay it, claiming that Ms. Ford's bonus contract did not

apply to the acquisition or the divestiture. As a result of this disagreement and an

inability to negotiate a mutually agreeable resolution, Ms. Ford's employment with

Lincare ended in early 2017.1 Ms. Ford filed suit against Lincare shortly thereafter,

seeking payment of the 2016 bonus amounts and raising clams for breach of contract,

breach of implied contract, unjust enrichment, and quantum meruit.

Lincare presented two main defenses at trial. First, it argued that neither

the large acquisition nor the divestment were subject to the bonus portion of Ms. Ford's

compensation contract because of their unusual natures. Next, it argued that even if

these transactions were subject to this bonus provision, Ms. Ford nevertheless was not

entitled to the claimed 2016 bonus amount because she was no longer an employee by

the time when the bonus was due to be paid in Spring 2017. This second argument

relied upon Lincare's bonus policy, which was admitted into evidence. That policy

1Whether Ms. Ford resigned or was fired was factually disputed at trial and was not expressly resolved by the jury, but the most significant fact related to this issue for the purposes of this opinion is undisputed and is that Ms. Ford was no longer employed at Lincare when the 2016 company bonuses were paid to its employees in Spring 2017. provided for a four-million-dollar bonus pool to be paid out to employees by a specified

date each year for the past year's performance. It also provided that "all non-executive

officer employees must be employed by the Corporations or their subsidiaries at the

time of the bonus payment to receive the bonus." (Emphasis added.) There was

testimony that Ms. Ford's bonuses each year were paid out of this bonus pool and were

always paid at the same time as all of the other employees under the bonus policy.

There was also testimony that the bonus policy applied to all of the administrative staff

in Lincare's headquarters, including Ms. Ford.

Ms. Ford moved for a directed verdict at the close of evidence, but the trial

court did not rule on her motion at that time and deferred until after the factual

determinations were made by the jury. Three questions were submitted to the jury. The

first asked whether the bonus provision in Ms. Ford's compensation contract applied to

the large acquisition, and the second asked whether it applied to the divestiture.2 The

third asked whether the fact that Ms. Ford was not employed by Lincare at the time the

bonuses were paid made her ineligible for her 2016 bonus. The jury answered that the

bonus provision in Ms. Ford's compensation contract did not apply to the divestiture. As

for the large acquisition, the jury answered that although the bonus contract applied to

it, Ms. Ford ultimately became ineligible to receive that bonus because she was no

longer an employee at the time when it was to be paid. The trial court then granted Ms.

Ford's request for a directed verdict on the basis that the bonus policy could not affect

Ms. Ford's eligibility for the bonus because she had fulfilled her employment obligations

2Claimsfor the other bonus amounts for the more typical work Ms. Ford performed in 2016 were also resolved in her favor in the directed verdict, and those claims are not argued directly as part of this appeal. for 2016 under the compensation contract and Ms. Ford did not assent to the terms of

the bonus policy. Lincare appealed from the judgment entered following the grant of the

motion for directed verdict.

We review a trial court's ruling on a motion for directed verdict de novo.

Christensen v. Bowen, 140 So. 3d 498, 501 (Fla. 2014); Omega Ins. Co. v. Wallace,

224 So. 3d 864, 867 (Fla. 2d DCA 2017). In so doing, "we apply the same test that the

trial court applies in ruling on the motion." Jackson Hewitt, Inc. v. Kaman, 100 So. 3d

19, 27 (Fla. 2d DCA 2011).

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