MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER
HORNBY, Chief Judge.
After a grueling day of mediation in a putative class action, the lawyers and those clients who were present agreed on the most important disputed issues. The mediator then drafted a statement of the terms they had accepted. All recognized that, since the lawsuit purported to be a
class action, any settlement agreement would have to be detailed and in writing to obtain court approval.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 23. As the mediator’s version was circulated for signature, one of the defendants’ lawyers added the following clause: “This mediation agreement contemplates that a written Settlement Agreement will be executed upon agreement to all material terms.” During the succeeding weeks, the lawyers drafted a detailed and comprehensive settlement agreement. But the defendants failed to provide what the plaintiffs deemed acceptable security for the financial installment obligation the defendants had agreed to. After a succession of court deadlines passed with no written settlement agreement filed for court approval, I issued decisions on pending motions. The decisions altered the parties’ respective negotiating positions. As a result, the defendants now refuse to go forward with the purported settlement. The plaintiffs have brought this motion to enforce the alleged agreement. Upon a
de novo
review and after an evidentiary hearing, I agree with the Magistrate Judge that the agreement is enforceable.
I. Facts
The factual allegations of the Amended Complaint are described extensively in earlier rulings.
See, e.g.,
Order on Pis.’ Mot. for Class Cert, and Defs.’ Mot. for Summ.J. (Mar. 31, 2000) (“Order of March 31, 2000”) (order denying class certification and granting most of defendants’ motion for summary judgment) at 3. For this motion, suffice it to say that the plaintiffs seek to represent a class of Mexican or Hispanic workers at the DeCoster egg farms. They charge DeCoster with racial/ethnic discrimination and a variety of other federal and state law violations.
Id.
At an early stage I granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss the government of Mexico, a ruling that was on appeal at the time of the mediation. Order on Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss PI. Estados-Unidos Mexi-canos, at 1 (Aug. 9, 1999) (order granting motion to dismiss government of Mexico). Difficult motions for class certification and for summary judgment also were filed and were pending at the time of mediation.
See
Order of March 31, 2000, at 2-3.
After I had invested substantial time and energy in working on the issues raised by the motions, the parties notified me that they were engaged in substantive and promising settlement negotiations. As a result, they asked me several times to delay ruling on their motions, and I consented. Order on Mot. to Stay Any Further Action on the Case Pending Mediation (Jan. 10, 2000).
In fact, the parties had engaged former United States Senator Rudman to mediate their dispute. Senator Rudman presided at a full day of mediation on February 21, 2000, here in Portland. Evidentiary Hearing (“Evid.Hr’g”) Ex. 34 (Test, of Senator Warren B. Rudman) at 2-3 (“Rudman Test.”); Evid. Hr’g Tr. at 76 (Test, of Att’y Karen Wolf); Tr. at 157-58 (Test, of De-Coster Att’y Timothy O’Brien). Austin De-Coster, the principal defendant, was present; so were one of the named individual plaintiffs, Luis Ramirez, and two representatives of the government of Mexico. Rudman Test, at 39-40; Tr. at 16 (Test, of Att’y Wolf). There were three lawyers, a paralegal and an interpreter (who was also a migrant labor organizer) for the plaintiffs; five lawyers for DeCoster; and a nonlawyer representative for the non-De-Coster defendants.
Id.
at 16, 24-25.
Toward the end of a long day of intensive mediation (the majority of it was
spent on financial terms, Rudman Test, at 2-3), the parties reached agreement on the amount of settlement and certain other matters.
Id.
at 21; Tr. at 18 (Test, of Att’y Wolf), 159-60 (Test, of Att’y O’Brien). Senator Rudman dictated to a paralegal the terms he believed the parties had agreed on as follows:
In the matter of
Estados Unidos Mexicanos et al. v. Austin J. DeCoster, et al.
Agreement reached under the auspices of mediation by Senator Warren B. Rud-man on February 21st, 2000 in Portland, Maine.
1. Plaintiffs agree to settle this matter against all Defendants for the sum of
$6
million dollars.
2. Payments shall be as follows:
$1.5 million upon approval of the Court
$4.5 million over a period of 24 months
3. The Plaintiffs agree to use their best efforts to help lift the boycott of De-Coster with the various retail establishments.
4. Consideration will be given to rehiring certain former employees of De-Coster.
5. Parties agree to make a good faith effort to deal with other collateral but not financial issues with the Court.
When the document was passed around, DeCoster attorney McGivney added a sentence:
6. This mediation agreement contemplates that a written Settlement Agreement will be executed upon agreement to all material terms.
Evid. Hr’g Ex. 1 at 1-2. Attorney Wolf signed the document for the plaintiffs; Attorney Schreiber signed for the defendants; and Senator Rudman signed as Mediator.
Id.
After Senator Rudman left to catch a plane, the lawyers tried to proceed with their negotiations, but discovered they were too exhausted. Tr. at 30-33 (Test, of Att’y Wolf). They resumed the next day at 11:00 a.m., the plaintiffs bringing a draft of another document.
Id.
at 32-33. After some progress, they adjourned, with the defendants’ lawyers promising to draft a comprehensive document for presentation to the Court.
Id.
at 33-34. Negotiations went on thereafter by phone, fax and mail.
See, e.g.,
Evid. Hr’g Ex. 5 (Letter from Att’y Schreiber to Att’y Friedman, Mar. 6, 2000); Evid. Hr’g Ex. 9 (Fax from Att’y Friedman to Att’y O’Brien, et al., Mar 22, 2000); Evid. H’rg Ex. 13 (3/27/00 Draft Settlement Agreement).
As the date approached when I was required by statute to report publicly the pending motions as having been under advisement for more than six months,
see
28 U.S.C. § 476 (Civil Justice Reform Act), I told the parties that the succession of consented-to delays would have to come to an end. Tr. of March 10, 2000 Conference at 2; Tr. of Mot. to Enforce at 49-50 (Cohen, Mag. J., Sept. 13, 2000). Although the lawyers continued to tell me and/or the Court’s case managers that settlement was imminent, Tr. of March 10, 2000 Conference, they did not file a written settlement agreement. At one conference of counsel, they told me that they had agreed upon the most difficult aspect of the settlement — money and that they were very hopeful of resolving everything. Tr. of Mot. to Enforce at 31 (statement by Att’y O’Brien), Tr. at 194 (Test, of Att’y O’Brien).
On March 27, 2001, DeCoster attorney Schreiber told plaintiff attorney Wolf that she “could just call the Court and tell them the case was settled.” Tr. at 46 (Test, of Att’y Wolf). Attorney Wolf did not do so. After waiting until the last possible time,
I proceeded to rule on March 31, 2000. Order on Pis.’ Mot. for Class Cert. & Defs.’ Mot. for Summ.J. at 2-3. Although each side won some and lost some portion of the rulings, the balance favored the defendants.
Id.
Not surprisingly, the defendants no longer endorse the terms of the purported settlement. Defs.’ Opp’n to Pis.’
In Camera
Mot. to Enforce Settlement Agreement (July 24, 2000) (“Defs.’ Opp’n”). The plaintiffs do. Pis..’
In Camera
Mot. to Enforce Settlement Agreement (July 7, 2000) (“Pis.’ Mot. to Enforce”).
On July 7, 2000, the plaintiffs brought a motion to enforce settlement. Pis.’ Mot. to Enforce at 9-11. The defendants opposed it. Defs.’ Opp’n at 9-10. After full briefing and oral argument, Magistrate Judge Cohen recommended that the motion be granted. Recommended Decision on Pis.’ Mot. to Enforce Settlement (Cohen, Mag. J., Sep. 18, 2000) (“Rec.Dec.”) at 1, 24 (recommending enforcement of Feb. 21, 2000 agreement). On review, I concluded that the better course was to hold an evidentiary hearing before ruling.
See Malave v. Carney Hosp.,
170 F.3d 217, 220 (1st Cir.1999);
Dankese v. Defense Logistics Agency,
693 F.2d 13, 16 (1st Cir.1982);
Warner v. Rossignol,
513 F.2d 678, 683 (1st Cir.1975). Testimony was taken on three days (one day by videoconference from Washington, D.C., where the lawyers and Senator Rudman appeared while I presided from the courtroom in Portland). Evid. Hr’g Ex. 34 (Rudman Test.); Evid. Hr’g Tr. Jan. 22-23, 2001.
II. Analysis
The parties have analyzed this settlement issue in terms of Maine law. The Magistrate Judge considered both federal and Maine law. Rec.Dec. at 5. A recent First Circuit decision makes clear that federal law must be applied where, as here, the underlying lawsuit is based upon federal statutes.
Quint v. A.E. Staley Mfg. Co.,
246 F.3d 11, 14 (1st Cir.2001);
see also
Malave,
170 F.3d at 220. I therefore limit my attention to federal law.
According to the First Circuit, “[the] argument, that when the parties to an agreement contemplate a written document will memorialize a contract, there can be no agreement until the document is executed, is a radical and doomed departure from the principles of contract law.... [T]hat is not the law.”
Quint,
246 F.3d at 15. Dealing with an oral agreement, the First Circuit went on to explain that “[t]here are certainly instances in which no ... contract is formed where material terms are not yet agreed upon, and no agreement is reached until there is written agreement embodying those material terms.”.
Id.
For that proposition, it cited an earlier ease that had stated: “Parties do not become contractually bound until they mutually assent to bind themselves to an agreement. Courts determine that mutual assent, not on the basis of what goes on inside the parties’ heads, but rather on the basis of what they say and do.”
Salem Laundry Co. v. New Eng. Teamsters & Trucking Indus. Pension Fund,
829 F.2d 278, 280 (1st Cir.1987) (citations omitted);
accord Abbott Lab. v. Alpha Therapeutic Corp.,
164 F.3d 385, 387 (7th Cir.1999). I apply those principles here, where I am the factfinder.
Salem Laundry,
829 F.2d at 280 (noting that trial court must inquire into intent of the parties);
RCI Northeast Servs. Div. v. Boston Edison Co.,
822 F.2d 199, 202 (1st Cir.1987) (noting that the factfinder “must ferret out the intent of the parties”).
A. Material Terms
Some things were clearly resolved in the first writing at the close of the February 21 day of mediation. The document resolved the amount the defendants would pay in compromise; the schedule for payment; a best efforts commitment by the plaintiffs to help lift a boycott that certain retailers had imposed; and a good faith commitment on both sides in dealing with the Court on nonfinancial issues. Evid. Hr’g Ex. 1. (No issue has been made of the clearly precatory agreement to give “consideration” to rehiring.) But the defendants say that the following material terms were not agreed upon: (a) the definition of “best efforts”; (b) the scope of the plaintiff class; and (c) the nature of any security for the installment payments. Tr. at 170-71 (Test, of Att’y O’Brien).
I consider each separately.
(1) Best Efforts
The DeCoster defendants argue that lifting the boycott is an exceedingly important part of the agreement to them because the potential for ending the retailers’ boycott of DeCoster eggs is what justifies the amount of money DeCoster agreed to pay in order to settle. Tr. at 170-71 (Test, of Att’y O’Brien); DeCoster Defs.’
in camera
Obj. to Mag. Judge’s Rec.Dec. on Pis.’ Mot. to Enforce at 16-17 (Oct. 5, 2000) (“DeCoster Defs.’ Obj.”). I accept that assertion, but it remains the case that continuation of the boycott is in the control of third parties, not the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs cannot guarantee a favorable outcome under any language that might be drafted. They can only give “best efforts.” With time, more content and detail might have been added to what is included within the phrase “best efforts,” but the standard could not be more demanding than that. In fact, as Magistrate Judge Cohen observed, “best efforts” is a familiar term to lawyers and not unusual to find in a contract. Rec.Dec. at 9 n. 7; Tr. of Mot. to Enforce at 43;
see Triple-A Baseball Club
Assoc.
v. Northeastern Baseball, Inc.,
832 F.2d 214, 225 (1st Cir.1987) (enforcing parties’ agreement to use “best efforts” to obtain approval of purchase of baseball franchise);
Satellite Broadcasting Cable, Inc. v. Telefonica de Espana,
807 F.Supp. 210, 212 (D.P.R.1992) (“Where the party includes in the contract a best efforts clause, the same will be given effect.”). Compliance with or breach of the “best efforts” clause could be determined without further enumeration of what the parties contemplated.
See Triple-A Baseball,
832 F.2d at 225 (noting that “best efforts” standard has been held to be equivalent to that of good faith).
(2) Scope of Plaintiff Class
The defendants argue that the agreement signed at the close of mediation does not specify the scope of the class. De-Coster Defs.’ Obj. at 15-17;
see also
Defs.’ Opp’n at 11. In fact, however, the scope of the class had never been an issue during the mediation. After all, a motion for class certification had been filed, and the entire dispute arises out of employment and housing relationships between the plaintiffs and the DeCoster defendants. The only “scope” issues possible were defining the ethnic group and the chronological years covered. It was in the defendants’ interest to have as broad a definition as possible for all the obvious reasons. Although there was some later suggestion by the plaintiffs to limit the class to plaintiffs of Mexican origin, Tr. at 174-75 (Test, of Att’y O’Brien), when the defendants objected, the plaintiffs’ lawyers quickly agreed to the defendants’ definition that included all Hispanic plaintiffs.
Id.
at 236.
This topic was not mentioned in the agreement only because it was not a matter of dispute between the parties.
(3) Security for the Installment Obligation
The agreement that Senator Rudman drafted does not mention any security for DeCoster’s installment obligation.
See
Evid. H’rg Ex. 1. (The reference to “collateral” in paragraph 5 is in its adjectival sense of auxiliary or secondary, not as a noun meaning security.) But the subject came up toward the end of the day of mediation, when DeCoster first proposed an installment payment as he increased the amount he was willing to pay to settle. Tr. at 20-21 (Test, of Att’y Wolf), 177 (Test, of Att’y O’Brien). According to Senator Rudman, whose testimony I credit as a neutral observer:
[T] here was an intensive discussion about securitizing the 4.5 million dollars that would be outstanding for, I recall, 24 months. There was a discussion that the parties would get together subsequent to the mediation and try to find a satisfactory way of doing that.
This was kind of at the end of all of this, and once it became apparent this would not be a cash outright settlement, an outright cash settlement, you [referring to plaintiff attorney Friedman] expressed concern about that. And so I asked the parties, I asked Mr. Decoster’s counsel — and I might say he was sitting essentially two chairs away from me at that time or three chairs away— that could they come up with any idea then and there in which they could outline a piece of property or a security interest or something that we could incorporate in the agreement.
I asked the question, I recall that, and it was obvious that they could not, and I believe Mr. DeCoster himself indicated that his corporate holdings were fairly complex. He did not have in his head how much equity there might be in a particular piece of real estate or other real or personal property, and thus
there would be discussions subsequent, and I understood that. No reason he should know that at the time, and that is why it was not specified. I would have preferred to, but, obviously, we could not do that.
Q. By “specified” you mean articulated in the writing?
A. Yes. I would like to have specified a farm located in Bridgton, Maine, or whatever....
Rudman Test, at 12-14.
But subsequently on February 21, 2000, the parties did get together, apparently outside of Senator Rudman’s presence. Tr. at 21, 36 (Test, of Att’y Wolf), 177 (Test, of Att’y O’Brien). The defendants agreed orally that day that DeCoster would in fact provide security for the obligation — the words used were “adequate security,” Tr. at 21 (Test, of Att’y Wolf); Tr. of Mot. to Enforce at 36 (Statement of Att’y O’Brien)? but the amount and nature were not defined.
On this topic, I agree with the Magistrate Judge that the nature of the security is not a material term. Rec.Dec. at 14 (“[T]he nature of [the] security .... is not integral to the settlement itself.”). Moreover, the requirement of “adequate security” is enforceable in any event. Applying that standard is the typical sort of dispute that courts are called upon to resolve.
So no material terms were missing from the agreement. Indeed, the absence of material terms is largely a makeweight set of arguments. The DeCoster defendants’ more serious argument is their contention that Attorney McGivney’s insertion of paragraph 6 in the February 21 document meant that any apparent “agreement” Senator Rudman had achieved was illusory and unenforceable. Def. DeCoster Obj. at 14-15.
B. Was a Further Writing Required to Make the Agreement Enforceable?
As I said at the outset, the First Circuit has determined that existence of an enforceable agreement is to be resolved by the factfinder.
Salem Laundry Co.,
829 F.2d at 280. I must determine factually whether there was mutual assent to be bound at the close of mediation, and I must determine that, not by what was in people’s heads, but objectively by what they said and did.
Id.
I therefore examine the evidence from that perspective. I observe first that the lawyers who were present at the mediation and who testified in court are heavily invested in the outcome
of this dispute for powerful financial and emotional reasons. I do not for a moment suggest that any of them testified dishonestly; they are all professionals of the highest standing. But I do believe that their understandings and recollections are inevitably colored by the passion of their participation. I find Senator Rudman, the mediator, to be the most neutral and dispassionate observer of what was said and done.
1. Senator Rudman testified that he had concluded from what he saw and heard that the parties had reached a settlement. Rudman Test, at 21. In confirmation, the document begins by calling itself “Agreement ...,” Evid. Hr’g Ex. 1 at 1, and its first provision states: “Plaintiffs agree to settle this matter against all defendants for the sum of
$6
million dollars.”
Id.
2. As I told the lawyers, I have no independent recollection of the words they used in speaking to me at various case conferences. The case managers testified that they understood from communications from the lawyers that a settlement was imminent, but that they never received the final confirmation from counsel that it had occurred, a message that would have prompted them to issue a procedural order. Tr. at 145-46 (Test, of Case Mgr. Marie Cross), 151-52 (Test, of Case Mgr. Deborah Whitney).
3. There is no evidence of what the class plaintiffs said and did that bears upon the issue. Only one class representative was present at the mediation. Tr. at 16 (Test, of Att’y Wolf); Rudman Test, at 40. According to Attorney Wolfs testimony, this plaintiff expressed concern to Senator Rudman about having been terminated in retaliation for his complaints and a desire to be reinstated. Tr. at 28 (Test, of Att’y Wolf). As a result, Senator Rudman inserted the provision that “consideration” would be given to reinstatement.
Id.
at 28-29. The representatives of the government of Mexico were well aware of what they were agreeing to and discussed with the defendants what Mexico could and could not do under the “best efforts” commitment.
Id.
at 25-26.
4. Austin DeCoster himself was present throughout the daylong negotiations.
Id.
at 16; Rudman Test, at 39. Senator Rudman testified that at the end of the day, DeCoster told Senator Rudman that the Senator had done a good job and that he, Austin DeCoster, had agreed to pay what was probably too much. Rudman Test, at 20-21, 42-43. Although I continued the evidentiary hearing on one occasion to permit DeCoster himself to testify about the negotiations, he ultimately chose not to.
5. One of the plaintiffs’ lawyers, Karen Wolf, testified in detail. Tr. at 12-137. Her testimony about the mediation day was consistent with that of Senator Rud-man. She also testified that the lawyers told me on March 10 that the case had settled, Tr. at 38, but I find that to be an overstatement of what was told me that day for the reasons set forth
supra
at n. 2. She testified about her intent in sending various letters to defense counsel over the days between February 21 and March 31 and also telephone conversations.
See, e.g,
Tr. at 76, 80-81, 86-87.
6. One of the DeCoster defendants’ lawyers, Timothy O’Brien, also testified in detail. Tr. at 154-245. He testified about the events of the February 21 mediation in a manner consistent with the testimony of Senator Rudman and that ultimately on February 21 DeCoster agreed to provide adequate security. Tr. at 177;
see also
Tr. of Mot. to Enforce at 36. He explained the importance of favorable publicity and a joint press conference to DeCoster’s business circumstances. Tr. at 188-192. He
also testified about the negotiations between February 21 and March 31.
See, e.g., id.,
at 172-187.
7. Another of the DeCoster defendants’ lawyers, John McGivney, also testified in detail. Tr. at 246-282. He testified about the mediation proceedings and his concern when he heard Senator Rudman dictating an agreement, considering it to be unnecessarily dangerous.
Id.
at 250-62. He testified that he, Attorney McGivney, personally avoided signing the agreement and, when he saw that Attorney Sehreiber would sign it, arranged to insert paragraph 6 into the document so as to, in Attorney McGivney’s mind, prevent it from becoming a settlement agreement.
Id.
at 251-52. He also testified about the negotiations between February 21 and March 31, an unprofessional telephone call exchange on March 28 where the negotiations were disrupted (Attorney Wolf also testified about this incident), and what happened thereafter.
Id.
at 256-66.
8. Senator Rudman’s best recollection of how paragraph 6 came to be added is as follows:
[W]e had come to the agreement, and we were sitting drafting it, and one of the counsel said, “you know, we are going to need a more formal settlement agreement. There are collateral things here that we have to wrap up, and we ought to be able to wrap them up. And this paper itself we can’t give to Judge Hornby. So let’s get together in the next few days and put together a settlement agreement.” That was essentially the conversation that was had.
Rudman Test, at 41-42. I credit this account for the reasons I have already stated.
What I find from all this is that Austin DeCoster thought he had agreed to a settlement, plaintiffs’ lawyer Wolf thought there was agreement, as did the plaintiff representatives who were present, and Senator Rudman thought there was agreement. Attorney McGivney thought he had created a loophole by inserting paragraph 6, Tr. at 250-53 (Test, of Att’y McGivney), but Attorney McGivney did not express aloud to the others what it was he was doing. Certainly the insertion of paragraph 6 did not
create
additional unagreed-to material terms. I find therefore that the parties had agreed on all material terms. Moreover, they expressed to each other and to Senator Rudman that they had reached agreement, whatever Attorney McGivney thought internally. Rud-man Test, at 19-20, 42-43. Those words and conduct created a binding agreement. All the lawyers and Senator Rudman recognized that a formal written document must be prepared in order to secure court approval, but that was basically a scriven-ing exercise, with a good faith obligation attached. That was the reasonable objective interpretation of paragraph 6. The intent to be bound was made manifest, and paragraph 6 did not expressly condition the effectiveness of the deal on execution of a later, more comprehensive, document. The February 21 agreement was, therefore, binding.
See Abbott Lab.,
164 F.3d at 388-89 (“[Ijnformal writings between parties can constitute a binding settlement agreement unless the parties decide to
expressly condition
their deal on the signing of a formal document. This is an accurate statement of the rule, but informal writings must still manifest each party’s intent to be bound by the material terms proposed.”) (emphasis added).
It is important not to lose sight of the fact that this was a lawsuit essentially about money. Once the money issue was resolved, everything else could be expected to fall into place after some pushing and shoving. Subsequently, the plaintiffs pushed too hard for security, and I was
insufficiently flexible in permitting extensions of time, but those subsequent events do not change the fact that as of the close of the mediation day, there was an enforceable agreement.
C. Repudiation
There is one final issue. If there was an enforceable agreement at the end of February 21, 2000, did the plaintiffs later repudiate it in statements and actions leading up to March 31, such that the defendants were entitled to treat the settlement agreement as no longer in effect once the Court issued its March 31 Order? The defendants did not raise this argament in their papers before Magistrate Judge Cohen. They raised it only after he ruled against them. That is too late and. amounts to a waiver of the argument.
Santiago v. Canon U.S.A, Inc.,
138 F.3d 1, 4 & n. 3. (1st Cir.1998) (“The district court is under no obligation to discover ... new legal theories for a party challenging a report and recommendation issued by a magistrate judge. There is no indication that the magistrate judge was ever alerted to the legal theory belatedly asserted by plaintiffs ... before the district court.”);
Borden v. Secretary of Health & Human Servs.,
836 F.2d 4, 6 (1st Cir.1987) (“[T]he district court judge properly refused to
consider an argument which could have been, but inexplicably was not, presented to the magistrate in the first instance.”);
Singh v. Superintending Sch. Comm. of Portland,
593 F.Supp. 1315, 1318 (D.Me.1984) (“On referral of a pretrial motion to the Magistrate for his hearing and determination thereon, all parties are required to take before him, not only their best shot but all of them shots.”).
In any event, I agree with Magistrate Judge Cohen’s analysis of the post-February 21 statements and conduct (apart from what was said to me about the settlement at the March 10 conference,
see
n. 2,
supra
). Rec.Dec. at 14-22. Specifically, the lawyers on both sides were posturing; the plaintiffs never said “we’re out of the agreement”; instead, the lawyers were working diligently with clients who were sometimes difficult to reach or pin down, and the lawyers simply watched in frustration as the Court’s deadline passed before they were able to produce the detailed written document required.
See
Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 250, Comment, at 273 (1981) (“Mere expression of doubt as to his willingness to perform is not enough to constitute a repudiation”). No party
repudiated
the agreement before I ruled on March 31.
I likewise find no repudiation by the plaintiffs in the delay before they filed their motion to enforce. My orders were issued on March 31, 2000. Obviously, the lawyers had to consult with their clients, the government of Mexico and the representative class plaintiffs; they also had to prepare their motion for reconsideration of the March 31st Order; they had to review the documents and events that had occurred in the congested time period between February 21, 2000 and March 31, 2000. They alerted the defendants and the Court to what was coming on May 22, 2000, in the letter to the defendants’ lawyers withdrawing the bond demand and their references at a conference that day with Magistrate Judge Cohen. There was no delay here that amounted to a repudiation of the agreement.
See Thermo Electron Corp. v. Schiavone Const. Corp.,
958 F.2d 1158, 1164 (1st Cir.1992) (noting that delay will repudiate a contract only if the plaintiff “unreasonably delayed” performing); Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 250, Illustr. 8, at 275 (1981) (noting that delay constitutes repudiation only if the delay would entitle the party to damages for total breach).
III. Conclusion
It should go without saying that the settlement agreement still must secure court approval under the strictures of Rule 23. The parties have not yet addressed themselves to all the intricacies of that rule. And perhaps ultimately they will be unable to meet all the requirements. All I am deciding now is that the defendants are currently in breach of a contractually enforceable agreement. If the agreement turns out to be unenforceable for other, Rule-related, reasons, I will have to address those issues then. But if for reasons
of the defendants’ recalcitrance I am unable to specifically enforce the agreement, that will be grounds for a remedy for breach of the settlement agreement.
The Magistrate Judge’s recommendation is Accepted, the defendants’ objection is Overruled, and the plaintiffs’ motion is Granted for the reasons set forth in this Memorandum Decision.
It should be clear from this opinion that I have respect for how the lawyers have professionally handled this difficult situation (but for the telephone conference of March 28, 2000). I expect the same professional behavior from them in the weeks ahead in implementing the settlement agreement now that I have ordered it enforced.
So Ordered.