Silvestri v. Optus Software, Inc.

814 A.2d 602, 175 N.J. 113, 19 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1011, 2003 N.J. LEXIS 8
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 23, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 814 A.2d 602 (Silvestri v. Optus Software, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Silvestri v. Optus Software, Inc., 814 A.2d 602, 175 N.J. 113, 19 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1011, 2003 N.J. LEXIS 8 (N.J. 2003).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

LaVECCHIA, J.

This is a breach of contract action. Defendant Optus Software, Inc. (“Optus” or “the company”), a small computer software company, hired plaintiff Michael Silvestri as its Director of Support Services, responsible for supervising the provision of technical support services to the company’s customers. Silvestri’s two-year employment contract contained a clause that reserved to the company the right to terminate his employment for failure to perform to the company’s satisfaction (the “satisfaction clause”).

Nine months into the contract, Silvestri was terminated under the satisfaction clause by the chief executive officer of Optus, Joseph Avellino. Silvestri filed this action, contending that the [118]*118company’s dissatisfaction was objectively unreasonable and that therefore his termination was a breach of the employment contract. The trial court granted summary judgment to the company. The Appellate Division reversed, however, holding that an employer must meet an objective standard for satisfaction in order to invoke a right to terminate pursuant to a satisfaction clause in an employment contract.

The question presented then is whether the employer’s satisfaction is subject to an objective or subjective evaluation. We conclude that, absent language to the contrary, a subjective assessment of personal satisfaction applies and that the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to the company was appropriate. We therefore reverse the contrary holding of the Appellate Division.

I.

Optus hired Silvestri for a two-year period commencing January 4, 1999, at an annual salary of $70,000. According to the company’s president and chief executive officer, defendant Avellino, Silvestri’s duties as a manager in this small business encompassed all tasks assigned to him by the board of directors. Specifically, Silvestri was charged with supervision of the support services staff, responsibility for communication with resellers of the Optus computer software to end-users, and coordination of ongoing training for support staff and resellers of the company’s products in order to maintain their proficiency in assisting end-users. The employment contract contained a clause allowing termination of Silvestri for “failure or refusal to perform faithfully, diligently or completely his duties ... to the satisfaction” of the company. Termination under that clause relieved the company of any further payment obligation to Silvestri.

The record indicates that Silvestri enjoyed the full support of Avellino during the first six months of his employment. Avellino’s communications within and without the organization praised Silvestri’s abilities and underscored his role as leader of the support services group. As late as July 16, 1999, Avellino sent an e-mail [119]*119message to all members of the group, exhorting them to support their new supervisor. The e-mail referred to the problems Optus had been having in providing technical support to resellers and end-users, stressed that Optus had hired Silvestri to help alleviate those problems, and again asked the staff to support Silvestri.

Although Avellino repeatedly expressed his belief in Silvestri’s ability and efforts during those early months, his attitude started to change during the summer months of 1999. In June, July, and August, several clients and resellers communicated to Avellino their disappointment with the performance and attitude of the support services staff generally, and several complaints targeted Silvestri specifically. Avellino informed Silvestri of those criticisms. As the criticisms mounted, Avellino’s concerns and frustrations grew, as evidenced by his e-mail exchanges with Silvestri and others. Finally, on September 3, 1999, Avellino told Silvestri that they needed to have a “heart-to-heart” talk about his performance. On September 17,1999, Silvestri was terminated.

Silvestri filed an action for breach of contract and tortious interference, naming Optus and Avellino as defendants. The complaint named another terminated support services employee as a co-plaintiff, but that employee’s claim was dismissed and is not part of this appeal.

Both parties moved for summary judgment relying on copies of the numerous e-mail communications between them. Defendants submitted copies of e-mail messages received from customers expressing difficulties with the delivery of support services, and with Silvestri’s attitude toward them. One from Peter Mittler, a large reseller of Optus products, complained to Avellino, as well as to another manager of Optus, about Silvestri’s lack of cooperation and his “dour, condescending attitude on the phone [that] made [Mittler] feel like [he] shouldn’t be bothering him.” Complaints were received from others both outside and within the company who were having difficulty interacting with the support services unit.

[120]*120In a certification in support of his motion, Avellino explained that he terminated Silvestri because Silvestri had failed to “exhibit the leadership and management skills necessary to perform his duties to the Company’s satisfaction.” He cited the objective evidence of the complaints received from the various customers and resellers as well as the concerns and frustrations he communicated to Silvestri at the time those complaints increased. The implication of the certification was that Avellino’s dissatisfaction was not an after-the-fact justification for termination. The relationship had been deteriorating over time and finally reached a breaking point after Silvestri failed, in the company’s judgment, to respond adequately to the numerous customer complaints. Optus is a small company in the business of customer services, .and difficulty with support to resellers and end-users of Optus’s products carries the potential for significant consequences in such a business.

Silvestri did not assert that there was any reason for his termination other than Avellino’s genuine dissatisfaction with his performance. Rather, Silvestri challenged the reasonableness of that dissatisfaction. He portrayed Avellino as a meddling micro-manager who overreacted to any customer criticism and thus could not reasonably be satisfied. By way of example, Silvestri focused on the legitimacy of Avellino’s concern about the criticism leveled at Silvestri and his support services group by Mittler, characterizing Mittler as someone who simply would not wait his turn for assistance when requesting technical support. It is undisputed that one of Silvestri’s innovations' was a “queue” system for prioritizing and addressing customer requests for support service assistance. According to Silvestri, Avellino’s overreaction to Mittler’s criticism demonstrated that the dissatisfaction with his performance was not objectively reasonable, or that at the very least it presented a question for a jury to determine.

On summary judgment, the trial court refused to substitute its judgment for that of the president and CEO of Optus in respect of whether Silvestri’s performance was satisfactory to the company. [121]*121The Appellate Division, on the other hand, relying on this Court’s per curiam decision in Fitzmaurice v. Van Vlaanderen Machine Co., 57 N.J. 447, 273 A.2d 561 (1971), concluded that an employer must meet an objective, reasonable-person test when invoking a satisfaction clause permitting termination of employment.

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Silvestri v. Optus Software, Inc.
814 A.2d 602 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2003)

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Bluebook (online)
814 A.2d 602, 175 N.J. 113, 19 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1011, 2003 N.J. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silvestri-v-optus-software-inc-nj-2003.