Swider v. Ha-Lo Industries, Inc.

134 F. Supp. 2d 607, 2001 WL 241753
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedMarch 20, 2001
DocketCiv.A. 99-1964
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 134 F. Supp. 2d 607 (Swider v. Ha-Lo Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swider v. Ha-Lo Industries, Inc., 134 F. Supp. 2d 607, 2001 WL 241753 (D.N.J. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

WOLIN, District Judge.

Now before the Court is defendant’s motion for summary judgment in this employment action. Plaintiff, Paul Swider, a former employee of defendant, HA-LO Industries, Inc. (“HA-LO”), brings this action for breach of contract, promissory estoppel, discriminatory discharge in violation of the New Jersey Law Against Discrimination (“LAD”) and fraud. Defendant has moved for summary judgment on all counts of the Complaint.

The Court has considered the submissions of the parties and decided this motion on the papers pursuant to Rule 78 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. For the reasons discussed below, the Court will grant defendant’s motion. Plaintiffs Complaint will be dismissed in its entirety, with prejudice.

BACKGROUND

1. Mergers and Acquisitions

In 1997, defendant, a Chicago-based company, acquired NB Specialties, Inc. (“NB”), a Montville, New Jersey-based company that distributed promotional products, such as merchandise bearing a company’s name or logo. Defendant was in the same industry as NB. After the acquisition, defendant maintained the Montville office, and employed Caryl and Neil Breithaupt, the former owners of NB. Caryl was hired as the office manager for New Jersey and Neil was hired as Sales Manager, also in New Jersey. Both Brei-thaupts were given written employment contracts specifying that they would hold those particular positions for five years and that they could only be dismissed for cause.

During this same period, plaintiff was working for Red Sail Merchandising (“Red Sail”), a San Francisco-based company. Plaintiff worked in their Hillside, New Jersey office as regional sales director. Sometime in 1997, plaintiff learned that Red Sail was to be sold to defendant. Herb Levy, Vice President — -Northeast for defendant, contacted plaintiff to express defendant’s interest in keeping him on after the acquisition. Plaintiff was told that defendant needed his experience to help in developing the New Jersey office. Plaintiff and Levy met several times to discuss plaintiffs employment with defendant. Plaintiff also met with Greg Kilrea, defendant’s CFO, for the same purpose.

Defendant offered plaintiff a position as Sales Manager for New Jersey, but did not inform plaintiff of what his specific duties would be. Plaintiff was told that it was not defendant’s practice to enter into written contracts with management-level employees. 1 At the time of his hiring, plaintiff did not know that Neil Breithaupt was also employed as Sales Manager for New Jersey or that Neil Breithaupt had a written employment contract.

*612 Plaintiff was told that defendant’s sales managers were typically expected to make sales, but that he would not be responsible for any sales himself. Swider Dep. 32:11— 23. 2 Plaintiff was further told by defendant’s Chief Operating Officer, Richard Magid, to disregard the comments of a fellow Red Sail employee, Ann Nepo, suggesting that plaintiff would not be Sales Manager after the acquisition. Magid told plaintiff not to worry about Nepo and assured him that defendant did want to hire him. Magid further told plaintiff that he knew the kind of individual Nepo was and that she had previously caused trouble at Red Sail. He suggested that if Nepo became a serious problem, her termination was a possibility. Swider Dep. 101:18-104:12.

Notwithstanding the offer from defendant, plaintiff did make a limited inquiry regarding other possible employment. Plaintiffs efforts in that regard were, however, relatively few and unfocused. He did not send out his resume or take any action beyond “networking and talking to people.” He had no actual interviews. Swider Dep. 35:3-36:3. Tom McNulty, a friend of plaintiff and then-client of Red Sail, invited plaintiff to come work for him “anytime [he] wanted.” Plaintiff and McNulty had a number of conversations about plaintiff’s joining McNulty’s company, one of which occurred before plaintiff had even spoken to Levy about working for defendant. These conversations occurred at McNulty’s offices when plaintiff was there on Red Sail business or visiting socially. Swider Dep. 36:7-39:11.

McNulty wanted plaintiff to work as a commissioned salesperson for Distro-Sales, a company owned by Green, Lind & McNulty, McNulty’s advertising firm. At the time, -Distro-Sales had no employees other than Green, Lind & McNulty employees who ran it and Distro-Sales had never employed a salesperson before plaintiff was offered the job. McNulty did not give plaintiff an offer in writing and they did not discuss the job in specific terms because plaintiff indicated that he was not interested. Plaintiff did not want to work strictly on a commission basis and, therefore, was not interested in working for Distro-Sales. Plaintiff obviously preferred working for defendant, who promised him that, notwithstanding his title as Sales Manager, he would not have to make any sales of his own. In fact, McNulty’s deposition testimony suggests that plaintiff would not have gone to work for Distro-Sales, even if he had not had an offer from defendant. See McNulty Dep. 40:1-6 (“[Plaintiff] wanted a position which was more of a management kind of a position and a position that had, as he indicated to me, a steadier income.”).

Plaintiff never told anyone at defendant-company that he had turned down a job offer from McNulty, Lind & Green. Plaintiff accepted defendant’s offer of employment and, on October 20, 1997, he began working for defendant in their Hillside office at a higher salary than he had been earning at Red Sail. As noted above, Neil Breithaupt had already been hired as Sales Manager as well, so plaintiff and Breithaupt were co-sales managers for New Jersey, with plaintiff operating out of the Hillside office and Breithaupt based in Montville. Apparently, it was understood by all parties that, notwithstanding their titles, plaintiff was in fact Neil’s superior, and that plaintiff had, in plaintiffs own words, “direct responsibility, overall responsibility for all operations and sales and *613 Neil was — Neil’s responsibility was for his own sales.” Swider Dep. 49:19-24.

Approximately three months after defendant acquired Red Sail, in or about January 1998, defendant merged its Mont-ville and Hillside offices into a single, new office space in Florham Park, New Jersey. Plaintiff had primary responsibility for the design and layout of that space. He worked with the architects and Sabina Fi-lipovic, from defendant’s Chicago office. Plaintiff states that he involved Neil Brei-thaupt in “all the decisions,” but that plaintiff maintained ultimate decision-making authority. Plaintiff remembers several occasions on which he overrode Neil’s suggestions, but contends that on the whole, they sought to achieve consensus through compromise. Swider Dep. 53:20-54:18.

Following the merger of the two offices, plaintiff continued to have overall responsibility for operations and ultimate decision-making authority.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 F. Supp. 2d 607, 2001 WL 241753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swider-v-ha-lo-industries-inc-njd-2001.