Vacc, Inc. v. Jon Davis

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedAugust 6, 2020
Docket19-15928
StatusUnpublished

This text of Vacc, Inc. v. Jon Davis (Vacc, Inc. v. Jon Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vacc, Inc. v. Jon Davis, (9th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION FILED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS AUG 6 2020 MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK U.S. COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

VACC, INC., No. 19-15928

Plaintiff-Appellant, D.C. No. 3:18-cv-03454

v.

JON DAVIS, MEMORANDUM*

Defendant-Appellee.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of California Joseph C. Spero, Magistrate Judge, Presiding

Submitted and Argued July 16, 2020 San Francisco, California

Before: LEE and BUMATAY, Circuit Judges, and SILVER,** District Judge.

VACC, Inc. appeals the district court’s order granting Jon Davis’s motion to

dismiss. We review de novo and affirm.

VACC sued Davis for claims related to patent violations and trade secrets

theft. After a series of negotiations, the parties agreed that they would meet at a

* This disposition is not appropriate for publication and is not precedent except as provided by Ninth Circuit Rule 36-3. ** The Honorable Roslyn O. Silver, United States District Judge for the District of Arizona, sitting by designation. final settlement conference, “read the settlement terms into the record,” and “then

enter into a formal written settlement agreement,” to be drafted by Davis for

VACC’s review.

Prior to the final settlement conference, Ahmad Bayat, VACC’s President,

repeatedly asked VACC’s attorneys to make sure that Davis represented in the

agreement that he had not taken VACC’s proprietary information (“representation

clause”). VACC’s attorneys assured Bayat that the representation clause would be

included in the eventual written agreement, but VACC’s attorneys never notified

Davis about this term.

At the telephonic settlement conference before the magistrate judge, the

parties agreed to the following:

THE COURT: Okay, I'm going to go through the terms. [The Court read the confidential terms of the parties’ settlement into the record, which did not include the representation clause.] And so let me start with plaintiff. We’ll start with plaintiff’s counsel. Is that your understanding of the settlement terms?1

[VACC’S COUNSEL]: [. . .] [Y]es, it is.

THE COURT: Thank you, and plaintiff himself, can you also state that you approve of this?

MR. BAYAT: Yes.

THE COURT: Thank you, and how about for defense counsel?

1 To the extent this paragraph incorporates sealed material, we unseal it.

2 [DAVIS’S COUNSEL]: Yes, we agree those are the terms of the settlement. I will note we also agreed that you would retain jurisdiction and the Northern District would retain jurisdiction over this dispute . . . and [ ] would moderate the terms of the written agreement.

THE COURT: Yeah, let me go back to that, then. So on plaintiff’s side, do you agree that this Court will retain jurisdiction over this settlement agreement as stated?

[VACC’S COUNSEL]: Yes[.]

Shortly after the conference, the parties entered a joint stipulation stating

that they had settled the matter and that the parties would “prepare a written

settlement agreement, which shall be moderated by [the magistrate judge] in the

event of unresolvable disagreements on its terms.” Based on the stipulation, the

court dismissed the case with prejudice.

When Davis’s counsel emailed a draft settlement agreement to VACC—

which was no longer represented by counsel—Bayat refused to sign, insisting that

the agreement include the representation clause. Davis’s counsel informed VACC

that they did not believe this term was part of the parties’ settlement, but

nonetheless reiterated that the parties needed to “formalize the terms of the

settlement” in writing as “a required term of settlement that we all read onto the

record.” Further negotiations broke down, and VACC sued again. The district

court dismissed VACC’s suit in full. This appeal followed.

1. VACC contends that the oral settlement was an unenforceable “agreement

3 to agree” because its terms were only “preliminary” and a written settlement was

required to finalize the agreement. We disagree.

Under California law, contract formation requires the “mutual consent” of

the parties. Bustamante v. Intuit, Inc., 45 Cal. Rptr. 3d 692, 698–99 (Ct. App.

2006). “Mutual consent is determined under an objective standard applied to the

outward manifestations or expressions of the parties, i.e., the reasonable meaning

of their words and acts, and not their unexpressed intentions or understandings.”

Bustamante, 45 Cal. Rptr. 3d at 699.

California permits an oral agreement to give rise to a binding contract.

Kreling v. Walsh, 176 P.2d 965, 973 (Cal. Dist. Ct. App. 1947). “[I]f the

respective parties orally agreed upon all of the terms and conditions of a proposed

written agreement with the mutual intention that the oral agreement should

thereupon become binding, the mere fact that a formal written agreement to the

same effect has not yet been signed does not alter the binding validity of the oral

agreement.” Banner Entm’t, Inc. v. Superior Court, 72 Cal. Rptr. 2d 598, 604 (Ct.

App. 1998). On the other hand, no binding oral agreement exists if “the parties

understood that the proposed agreement [was] not complete until reduced to formal

writing and signed.” Khajavi v. Feather River Anesthesia Med. Grp., 100 Cal.

Rptr. 2d 627, 648 (Ct. App. 2000) (quoting Louis Lesser Enters., Ltd. v. Roeder, 25

Cal. Rptr. 917, 919 (Dist. Ct. App. 1962)).

4 Here, all of VACC’s outward manifestations indicated assent to the terms of

the oral settlement as expressed in open court. Bayat, as VACC’s representative,

first affirmed that the “terms” read by the court into the record were his

“understanding of the settlement terms,” and then he indicated he “approve[d]” of

those terms. Finally, Bayat “agree[d] that [the] Court will retain jurisdiction over

th[e] settlement agreement as stated.”

Even if Bayat subjectively (and reasonably) believed—based on the advice

of counsel—that additional terms could be inserted into the settlement agreement

at a later time, Bayat’s objective words and actions at the settlement conference

demonstrate that a binding agreement was made at that time. Nothing in Bayat’s

outward manifestations suggests an understanding that the oral settlement

agreement would be contingent on the reduction of the agreement to writing. Nor

has VACC alleged that Davis or his attorneys knew of Bayat’s request to add the

representation clause in a follow-up written agreement. Accordingly, no allegation

supports VACC’s contention that the settlement conference was an unenforceable

“agreement to agree.”

The parties’ statements and actions outside the settlement conference

confirm their intention to be bound by the oral settlement’s terms. Prior to the

conference, the parties agreed to “read the settlement terms into the record,” and

“then enter into a formal written settlement agreement.” The parties’ post-

5 conference stipulation of dismissal states, with apparent finality, that “the Parties

have settled this case pursuant to a confidential settlement agreement.”

Accordingly, we hold that the oral settlement is enforceable notwithstanding the

parties’ subjective beliefs regarding additional terms.2

Our holding in Doi v. Halekulani Corp., further bolsters our conclusion. 276

F.3d 1131 (9th Cir. 2002). There, the plaintiff agreed to a settlement on the record,

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