Analysis: The Tennessee Court of Appeals recently
decided an interesting case that discussed how long a settlement offer stays
open when the settlement offer does not have a specific expiration date or any
reference to how long the offer will remain open. In the Tennessee Court of Appeals decision of
Tonita
Reeves v. Pederson-Kronseder, LLC d/b/a Pederson’s Natural Farms, Inc., No. M2013-01651-COA-R3-CV,
2014 WL 1285702 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2014) the employee and employer were
preparing to arbitrate an age discrimination case. Prior to the time of the arbitration the
parties entered into settlement negotiations.
On June 29, 2012, a specific settlement
proposal was made by defense counsel to the plaintiff after multiple prior
emails discussing the concept of settlement (this proposal did not have any
expiration date). Defense counsel
followed up with additional emails inquiring about the status of settlement but
plaintiff’s counsel provided no specific response. In the following month the parties engaged in
additional written discovery and took additional depositions. The arbitration was set for August 15, 2012. Without any further offer being made, the
plaintiff emailed defense counsel August 12, 2012, three days before the
arbitration, and accepted the June 29, 2012 offer of settlement. Defense counsel responded by stating that the
June 29, 2012 offer of settlement was no longer viable due to the passage of
time and the expenses that had been incurred since it was made.
Ultimately, the arbitration went forward
and the plaintiff did not receive a favorable outcome at the arbitration. As a result, the plaintiff filed a lawsuit in
Chancery Court alleging breach of contract for the settlement proposal that was
“accepted” prior to the mediation. The
trial court found there was no enforceable settlement agreement in this
circumstance. This was appealed to the
Tennessee Court of Appeals.
The Tennessee Court
of Appeals considered whether there was a legitimate settlement. The Court basically found that settlement
offers only remain open for a reasonable period of time even when there is no
expiration date. Reeves at 4,
5. The court cited the rule in
the Tullahoma
Concrete case where the Court stated:
If any such offer of settlement was made, there was no time limit on it
and, therefore, in such a situation, the law considers that the alleged offer
remained open for a reasonable time.
Reeves at 4 (citing Tullahoma
Concrete P. Co. v. T. E. Gillespie Const. Co., 405 S.W.2d 657 (Tenn. Ct. App.
1966)). The court went on to
discuss the fact that “rule
of reasonableness is applied to all types of contracts in Tennessee when an
offer does not include a specific time within which an acceptance or
performance is required.” Reeves at 4
(citing Shearer
v. McArthur, 2012 WL 5399221 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2012)).
The plaintiff in
Reeves attempted to argue that when a settlement offer is made with no time
limitation, it remains open indefinitely until it is either “expressly
rejected, withdrawn or accepted.” Reeves at 5. The Tennessee Court of Appeals in Reeves
rejected this argument and instead found the “reasonableness” test applies to
only keep the settlement offer open for a “reasonable” time period. Under the facts present in the Reeves case
the Court found that the offer was closed at the time it was finally accepted
by the plaintiff 1 ½ months after it was proposed. This was due to the additional discovery,
depositions and arbitration expenses that were incurred (including costs for
non-refundable airplane tickets for witnesses and hotel rooms for the
arbitration). As a result of these
significant expenses and discovery completed, the Court found the “reasonable
time for Pederson’s offer to remain open had passed by the time Ms. Reeves
sought to accept the offer.” Reeves at 5.
Ultimately, under
Tennessee law determining how long a settlement offer remains open when no time
period is provided is left up to a fact specific inquiry under the “reasonable
time” rule. The best practice for making
a settlement offer is to include a specific expiration date if one is
desired. If you do not provide a
specific expiration date then there is a risk that the offer will remain open
and then a dispute can arise when it is accepted at an inopportune time. Instead of having this dispute litigated
under the “reasonable time” test, it is best simply to have expiration for all
settlement offers.
Follow me on Twitter at @jasonalee for updates from the Tennessee Defense Litigation blog.
|