Peter Fogarty v. Near North Insurance Brokerage, Inc.

162 F.3d 74, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 30519, 1998 WL 827003
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedDecember 1, 1998
DocketDocket 98-7125
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 162 F.3d 74 (Peter Fogarty v. Near North Insurance Brokerage, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peter Fogarty v. Near North Insurance Brokerage, Inc., 162 F.3d 74, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 30519, 1998 WL 827003 (2d Cir. 1998).

Opinion

FEINBERG, Circuit Judge:

Defendant Near North Insurance Brokerage, Inc. (Near North) appeals from a judgment of $481,028.49 against it in favor of Peter Fogarty (Fogarty) after a jury trial in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York before Judge Leonard B. Sand. Fogarty, the former President of Near North’s New York office, had claimed that Near North unlawfully withheld bonus compensation he was entitled to pursuant to his employment contract, constructively discharged him and unlawfully withheld reimbursement for reasonable business expenses. Jurisdiction was based upon diversity of citizenship. The only point Near North raises on appeal is that the district court erroneously instructed the jury that it could, as a last resort, construe the ambiguous terms of the employment contract against *76 Near North, the drafter of the disputed terms of the contract. Near North claims that this instruction, which embodied the doctrine of contract construction known as contra proferentem, was an incorrect statement of the concededly applicable New York law. Near North further claims that the error was prejudicial because of the likelihood that the jury arrived at its verdict by applying the doctrine. Fogarty argues that (1) Near North failed to preserve the erroneous charge issue for appeal by offering no objection to the instruction when it was proposed to the district court, considered, and given in the charge; and (2) under the current state of New York law the instruction was appropriate under the circumstances.

For the reasons stated below, we agree with Fogarty that Near North failed to preserve at trial its objection to the charge. We therefore do not reach his second argument, and we affirm.

I. Background

Near North is a full-service insurance brokerage firm based in Chicago. In 1994, Near North wanted to add a risk management practice to its New York office and, in connection with this venture, sought to hire an executive employee. Near North approached Fogarty, then a senior consultant at another firm, and inquired about his interest in the position. Fogarty stated that Near North would have to offer him $400,000 per year in order to persuade him to'leave his current job, at which he had earned approximately $250,000 the year before. Tom Kna-up (Knaup), a Near North employee in charge of filling the New York position, offered Fogarty a compensation package of $200,000 in salary and a $200,000 bonus. Fo-garty asked that the terms of employment be put into writing.

Near North then sent Fogarty a three-year “offer of employment” in the form of an April 13, 1994 letter signed by Dan C. Bor-bas (Borbas), Near North’s Executive Vice President for Corporate Development and Human Resources. The two-page offer stated that Fogarty would “join Near North Insurance Brokerage as President of our New York office” at a salary of $200,000 per year, and that Fogarty’s annual $200,000 bonus would be based on two criteria: (1) the hiring of “necessary staff to develop and service the business being developed”; and (2) “your office” meeting the “Cumulative Revenue Production” goals specified for each of the three years of the proposed contract. After reviewing the offer, Fogarty called Knaup with two objections. First, Fogarty felt that the cumulative revenue production goals he was required to meet in order to qualify for his bonus were too high. Second, the offer appeared to make the bonus payable in a lump sum at year’s end and Fogarty did not want to wait that long to receive it.

In response to these concerns, Near North sent Fogarty a “revised offer of employment” in the form of a May 13, 1994 letter signed by Borbas. 1 The revised offer lowered Fo-garty’s cumulative revenue production goals *77 for all three years, and provided that his first-year bonus was to be paid in three installments linked to his progress in meeting the contract’s hiring and revenue requirements. . Fogarty accepted the revised offer, and began working for Near North in September 1994.

Fogarty remained an employee of Near North for 15 months, resigning in December 1995. He subsequently brought this lawsuit, alleging that Near North (1) breached his employment contract by unlawfully withholding $300,000 in earned bonus compensation; (2) constructively discharged him through actions that forced him to resign, entitling him to $100,000 in severance pay pursuant to the contract; and (3) owed him $7,500 for reimbursement of reasonable business expenses. The ease was assigned to Judge Cedarbaum. Fogarty moved for summary judgment on his breach of contract claim, but the motion was denied on the ground that the contract was ambiguous. The case was then reassigned to Judge Sand.

At trial before Judge Sand, the bonus dispute focused on the meaning of the contract language naming Fogarty “President of our [Near North’s] New York office,” and making Fogarty’s bonus dependent, in part, upon “your office” meeting specified “Cumulative Revenue Production” goals. These terms, drafted by Near North as part of its original offer, were not changed in its revised offer, nor were they ever questioned by Fogarty. Near North’s position was that “President of our New York office” meant President only of the risk management practice within Near North’s New York office and that, similarly, “Cumulative Revenue Production” of “your office” meant the cumulative revenue production of only the risk management practice within the New York office. Under this interpretation of the contract, Fogarty was not entitled to the bonus compensation he was seeking. It was Fogarty’s position, on the other hand, that the disputed terms meant that he was President of the entire New York office and that the relevant cumulative revenue production was that of the New York office as a whole. Under this interpretation of the contract, Fogarty was entitled to the $300,000 bonus. 2

As for his claim of $100,000 in severance pay, Fogarty’s position at trial was that the circumstances surrounding his resignation constituted a constructive discharge and, .thus, a “termination” under the contract, see note 1, for reasons other than “gross misconduct.” In support of this claim, Fogarty testified that Near North reduced his responsibilities and authority, delayed bonuses that were eventually paid to him, placed an advertisement in a trade publication seeking a replacement for his position, would neither confirm nor deny his suspicion that he was to be replaced and withheld the $300,000 in bonus payments upon which his breach of contract claim was based. According to Fo-garty, these actions forced him to resign. In addition, Fogarty argued that since his alleged constructive discharge was a “termination,” pursuant to his contract he was entitled to a severance payment of six months of his annual salary. Since Fogarty’s salary was $200,000 per year, the termination entitled him to $100,000. As for his business expense claim, Fogarty testified that he was never reimbursed for $7,500 spent entertaining .clients.

The district court thoroughly instructed the jury on the law it was to apply in the course of its deliberations. The instruction at issue here concerned the manner in which the jury was to interpret the contract if it was unable to determine the parties’ intent, as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 F.3d 74, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 30519, 1998 WL 827003, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peter-fogarty-v-near-north-insurance-brokerage-inc-ca2-1998.