Stetson v. Duncan

707 F. Supp. 657, 1988 WL 149952
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 25, 1988
Docket84 Civ. 0564 (JMW)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 707 F. Supp. 657 (Stetson v. Duncan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stetson v. Duncan, 707 F. Supp. 657, 1988 WL 149952 (S.D.N.Y. 1988).

Opinion

ORDER

WALKER, District Judge:

The Court, after careful consideration of the record and Magistrate Grubin’s Report and Recommendation dated March 15, 1988, and no objections thereto having been timely filed, hereby adopts that Report and Recommendation in all respects, for the reasons stated therein.

SO ORDERED.

REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION

SHARON E. GRUBIN, United States Magistrate:

The subject of this Report is the defendants’ motion for enforcement of a written settlement agreement prepared by counsel for the parties but never signed by plaintiff himself. For the reasons that will be set out below, I respectfully recommend that your Honor deny the motion. In light of my conclusion that the purported settlement of the action not be enforced, this report will also address a summary judgment motion that was earlier brought by defendant Duncan. My recommendation with respect to that motion is that it be denied as well.

This is an action for trademark infringement, dilution and unfair competition in connection with the name of a singing group formed in the mid-1950’s, “The Dia *658 monds.” The group was very successful and had several million-selling records, including “Two Silhouettes on the Shade,” “Little Darlin,’ ” and “The Stroll.” Both plaintiff, Glen Stetson, and defendant, Bob Duncan, are lead performers in separate groups performing under the name “The Diamonds,” and both perform the songs made famous by the original group. They both claim rights in the mark “The Diamonds” through various disputed assignments of the mark over the years as well as through common-law usage. The present motion requires a detailed exposition of its factual background.

This action was commenced in January 1984 and assigned to the Honorable Abraham D. Sofaer. After close to a year of initial skirmishes by the parties, Judge So-faer referred the case to me for the handling of all pretrial discovery and motions, and I held a conference on November 28, 1984 at which time there were pending motions by defendant Duncan to compel discovery and to obtain a protective order concerning depositions. Current defendant Diamond Productions, Inc. (of which Duncan is president and owner), which had not been named as a defendant, had moved to intervene, and defendant Duncan had also moved for summary judgment. On December 6, 1984 I issued an order memorializing certain rulings made at the conference, granting Diamond Productions’ motion to intervene and directing plaintiff Stetson to answer certain of Duncan's interrogatories and complete production of documents by December 28, 1984. The order provided that the depositions of Stetson and Duncan, as to which there had been scheduling problems, were to be taken by January 4, 1985. The order further provided that another conference would be held on January 8, 1985 at which time oral argument would be heard on Duncan’s motion for summary judgment and any additional discovery disputes that may have arisen in the interim would be resolved. 1 The order also expressly provided as follows:

“The parties will be expected to report to the court at the conference on settlement negotiations, and counsel are hereby directed to meet prior to January 4,1985 to engage in good faith settlement discussions. Counsel authorized to make any and all decisions concerning this case, including settlement thereof, are expected to be present pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 16.”

Thereafter, counsel for the parties immediately engaged in discussions to schedule their clients’ depositions. 2 Because both plaintiff and defendant as performers were frequently traveling, it was difficult to arrange a schedule, and it was finally determined that both depositions would take place in Los Angeles commencing Tuesday, December 18, 1984.

Counsel also commenced serious settlement discussions on December 13, 1984. All discussions were had by telephone between Kathy N. Rosenthal of the New *659 York firm of Marcus and Marcus, Stetson’s attorneys, and Edward J. Quirk of Las Vegas, Nevada, Duncan’s attorney, and there is no real dispute as to what occurred between them. Because the depositions the following week and preparation for them were expected to be quite expensive for both parties, they decided that settlement should be attempted prior thereto. Rosenthal and Quirk had numerous telephone discussions on Thursday, December 13 and Friday, December 14 which continued throughout the weekend. Late on Monday, December 17 they reached an agreement. Quirk has testified that throughout these conversations Rosenthal told him repeatedly that she could not respond to his various requests or proposals without talking to her client, Stetson, and told him that she would call Quirk back after talking with Stetson. She would later call back Quirk saying she had spoken with Stetson and reporting his comments which would then be folded into their continued discussions. According to Quirk, there was no doubt in his mind that Rosen-thal was in constant contact with Stetson and that she had complete authority to settle the case. Rosenthal’s testimony confirms that she was in continual contact with Stetson by telephone, although she describes her authority as complete authority to negotiate settlement which she distinguishes from authority to settle.

After agreement was reached over the telephone on December 17 Quirk immediately drafted a written settlement agreement containing the agreed-upon terms and sent it to Rosenthal by Federal Express (see Exs. 4, 5). Rosenthal called him on December 18 or 19 to say the draft was consistent with their oral agreement and that Stetson would be coming to her office to sign it, although it might be a couple of weeks because of the upcoming holidays and the fact that Stetson was traveling. She confirmed the substance of her call by letter of December 21 (Ex. 8).

On December 28 I received a letter dated December 20 from Quirk (Ex. 6), informing me that the scheduled January 8 conference would be unnecessary because the case had been settled “in principle,” in that “[agreement on all settlement terms was reached on December 17 by telephone” between Rosenthal and Quirk. Quirk’s letter stated that “[t]he settlement obviated” the scheduled depositions and the further pleadings and discovery responses required by my order. He further informed me that he had sent the draft agreement to Rosen-thal who had indicated to him that it correctly embodied the settlement terms although “some minor drafting changes may be needed” and that executed copies would not be available until January because of the holidays. I responded by letter to counsel of January 2 (Ex. 9), informing them that the January 8 conference would be adjourned, but only to January 16 unless a stipulation of dismissal were received by the court prior to then. Prior to Judge Sofaer’s referring the case to me, he had scheduled a pretrial conference for January 11. In light of the events, on January 7 Rosenthal wrote a letter to Judge Sofaer informing him that the case had been “settled in principle” and seeking cancellation of that conference. She also told the judge as follows:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
707 F. Supp. 657, 1988 WL 149952, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stetson-v-duncan-nysd-1988.