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You are here: Home1 / Civil Procedure2 / DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE DID NOT UTTERLY REFUTE PLAINTIFF’S CORRESPONDENCE-EVIDENCE...
Civil Procedure, Contract Law, Employment Law

DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE DID NOT UTTERLY REFUTE PLAINTIFF’S CORRESPONDENCE-EVIDENCE THAT AN EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT HAD BEEN ENTERED AND BREACHED BY THE DEFENDANT, DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS PROPERLY DENIED (CT APP).

The Court of Appeals, in a full-fledged opinion by Judge Stein, determined that an exchange of correspondence supported plaintiff’s allegation of the existence of an employment contract and a breach of that contract. The documentary evidence submitted by the defendant did not utterly refute the allegations in the complaint. Therefore the defendant’s motion to dismiss was properly denied:

… [W]e conclude that, based on all the documentary evidence proffered by defendant, a reasonable fact-finder could determine that a binding contract was formed. Ertel’s [the CEO’S] initial email to plaintiff stated that “[t]he terms of our offer are the same [as the] terms of your existing contract” — apart from “a clarification” concerning an issue that plaintiff characterizes as minor — and outlined the core terms that were included in the 2009 Agreement. He added that, if plaintiff had “[a]ny further questions” he should consult his “existing contract.” Inasmuch as this email explained that “the terms of the offer” were to be nearly identical to the terms of plaintiff’s existing contract, a reasonable fact-finder could interpret it as evincing an objective manifestation of defendant’s intent to enter into a bargain, such that plaintiff was justified “in understanding that his assent to that bargain [was] invited and [would] conclude it”… . Put differently, it could reasonably be inferred that Ertel’s email constituted a valid offer by defendant. In response to that email, plaintiff wrote “I accept. pls [sic] send contract,” to which Ertel replied, “Mazel. Looking forward to another great run.”… Affording plaintiff the benefit of every favorable inference, this exchange — in essence, we “offer” and “I accept,” followed by an arguably congratulatory exclamation, coupled with a forward-looking statement about the next stage of the parties’ continuing relationship — sufficiently evinces an objective manifestation of an intent to be bound for purposes of surviving a motion to dismiss … . Although Ertel’s email referenced one outstanding “clarification,” the parties’ further communications indicate that such clarification was incorporated into the first draft of the new agreement sent by Zeliger [general counsel] to plaintiff, and no evidence was offered to suggest that plaintiff resisted that change to the terms of the 2009 Agreement. We reject defendant’s argument that plaintiff’s contract claim should have been dismissed because the additional correspondence defendant proffered in support of its motion to dismiss reflects a lack of mutual assent to material terms — such as plaintiff’s minimum guaranteed compensation and the length of the non-compete term — and that this indefiniteness renders the purported contract invalid as a matter of law. As the Appellate Division concluded, that correspondence does not conclusively refute contract formation … . Kolchins v Evolution Mkts., Inc., 2018 NY Slip Op 02209, CtApp 3-29-18

CONTRACT LAW (CORRESPONDENCE, DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE DID NOT UTTERLY REFUTE PLAINTIFF’S CORRESPONDENCE-EVIDENCE THAT AN EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT HAD BEEN ENTERED AND BREACHED BY THE DEFENDANT, DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS PROPERLY DENIED (CT APP))/EMPLOYMENT LAW (CONTRACT LAW, DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE DID NOT UTTERLY REFUTE PLAINTIFF’S CORRESPONDENCE-EVIDENCE THAT AN EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT HAD BEEN ENTERED AND BREACHED BY THE DEFENDANT, DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS PROPERLY DENIED (CT APP))/CIVIL PROCEDURE (MOTION TO DISMISS, DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE DID NOT UTTERLY REFUTE PLAINTIFF’S CORRESPONDENCE-EVIDENCE THAT AN EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT HAD BEEN ENTERED AND BREACHED BY THE DEFENDANT, DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS PROPERLY DENIED (CT APP))/CPLR 3211 (DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE DID NOT UTTERLY REFUTE PLAINTIFF’S CORRESPONDENCE-EVIDENCE THAT AN EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT HAD BEEN ENTERED AND BREACHED BY THE DEFENDANT, DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS PROPERLY DENIED (CT APP))/CORRESPONDENCE (CONTRACT LAW,  DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE DID NOT UTTERLY REFUTE PLAINTIFF’S CORRESPONDENCE-EVIDENCE THAT AN EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT HAD BEEN ENTERED AND BREACHED BY THE DEFENDANT, DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS PROPERLY DENIED (CT APP))/EMAILS (CONTRACT LAW,  DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE DID NOT UTTERLY REFUTE PLAINTIFF’S CORRESPONDENCE-EVIDENCE THAT AN EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT HAD BEEN ENTERED AND BREACHED BY THE DEFENDANT, DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS PROPERLY DENIED (CT APP))/LETTERS (CONTRACT LAW,  DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE DID NOT UTTERLY REFUTE PLAINTIFF’S CORRESPONDENCE-EVIDENCE THAT AN EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT HAD BEEN ENTERED AND BREACHED BY THE DEFENDANT, DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS PROPERLY DENIED (CT APP))

March 29, 2018
Tags: Court of Appeals
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https://www.newyorkappellatedigest.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/NYAppelateLogo-White-1.png 0 0 Bruce Freeman https://www.newyorkappellatedigest.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/NYAppelateLogo-White-1.png Bruce Freeman2018-03-29 15:13:292020-02-06 00:58:03DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE DID NOT UTTERLY REFUTE PLAINTIFF’S CORRESPONDENCE-EVIDENCE THAT AN EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT HAD BEEN ENTERED AND BREACHED BY THE DEFENDANT, DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS PROPERLY DENIED (CT APP).
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