No Signed Settlement Necessary, Except When It Is
On January 28, 2014, the Kansas Court of Appeals, held that the parties bind themselves to an enforceable settlement, even though the parties contemplate subsequent execution of a formal instrument. In dicta, the court issued a strong reminder to counsel who routinely wish to draft a settlement that when the parties specifically condition a contract on it being reduced to writing and signed, there is no enforceable contract until such act is accomplished.
In O’Neill v. Herrington, the Plaintiffs, the O’Neills, sent an email to defendant McDowell, Rice, Smith & Buchanan, PC (MRSB) offering to dismiss their pending lawsuit in exchange for a mutual release. MRSB accepted the offer by return email. The O’Neills asked MRSB to prepare the written settlement agreement, and then the O’Neills read and requested a modification to the release, and then told MRSB to “send them a signed copy of the formal written settlement agreement and release for them to sign.” MRSB did so, and then emailed the trial judge to advise him of the settlement, and the trial judge asked the O’Neills to confirm the settlement via email, which the O’Neills did.
When the O’Neills refused to sign the agreement, MRSB moved to dismiss the case with prejudice and require the O’Neills to sign the settlement agreement. The trial court found that the settlement bound the parties, even though the written settlement had not been signed. The court of appeals affirmed.
The O’Neills made two arguments on appeal in an attempt to avoid settlement. First, that it was not their intent to settle two previously dismissed claims against MRSB, but only the pending claims in the current lawsuit. Second, that they did not intend to be bound by the agreement until they had a formal written agreement reviewed by counsel.
As to the O’Neills’ intent, the court of appeals held that the test for a meeting of the minds is objective, not subjective, and that while the O’Neills secret intent may have been to provide a limited release, the O’Neills failed to disclose this intent, and thus it may not be considered. Thus, the emails, which used unambiguous words between the parties, showed that an offer and acceptance had occurred.
As to the contention that the O’Neills did not intend to be bound until a written agreement was reviewed by their attorney and signed, the court of appeals dismissed this argument. It found that the trial judge specifically explained to the O’Neills that the agreement to settle was binding even before the settlement papers were signed. Second, the O’Neills contacted MRSB and set a 24-hour deadline to settle. The O’Neills did not have an attorney at that time, and did not plan to meet with their attorney until the next week, long after their self-imposed deadline had expired. The court of appeals found it was disingenuous for the O’Neills to contend that they did not intend to be bound by the settlement agreement on the day they made and accepted the offer to MRSB. Thus, when one party has made a settlement offer and the other party has unconditionally accepted it, neither party may call off the agreement pending signatures on a written settlement.
The full opinion of the case may be found online here.
related services
- Food & Beverage
- Healthcare
- Hospitality & Leisure
- Insurance
- Pharmaceutical & Medical Device
- Retail
- Trucking
- Complex Commercial & Business Litigation
- Employment & Labor
- Financial Services Litigation
- Medical Malpractice
- Personal Injury Defense
- Premises Liability
- Product Liability
- Professional & Management Liability
About Kansas Law Blog
Baker Sterchi's Kansas Law Blog examines significant developments, trends and changes in Kansas law on a broad range of topics that are of interest to Kansas practitioners and to businesses evaluating risks under Kansas law or managing litigation subject to Kansas law. Learn more about the editor, David Eisenberg.
Subscribe via email
Subscribe to rss feeds
RSS FeedsABOUT baker sterchi blogs
Baker Sterchi Cowden & Rice LLC (Baker Sterchi) publishes this website as a service to our clients, colleagues and others, for informational purposes only. These materials are not intended to create an attorney-client relationship, and are not a substitute for sound legal advice. You should not base any action or lack of action on any information included in our website, without first seeking appropriate legal or other professional advice. If you contact us through our website or via email, no attorney-client relationship is created, and no confidential information should be transmitted. Communication with Baker Sterchi by e-mail or other transmissions over the Internet may not be secure, and you should not send confidential electronic messages that are not adequately encrypted.
The hiring of an attorney is an important decision, which should not be based solely on information appearing on our website. To the extent our website has provided links to other Internet resources, those links are not under our control, and we are not responsible for their content. We do our best to provide you current, accurate information; however, we cannot guarantee that this information is the most current, correct or complete. In addition, you should not take this information as a promise or indication of future results.
Disclaimer
The Kansas Law Blog is made available by Baker Sterchi Cowden & Rice LLC for educational purposes only as well as to give you general information and a general understanding of the law, not to provide specific legal advice. Your use of this blog site alone creates no attorney client relationship between you and the firm.
Confidential information
Do not include confidential information in comments or other feedback or messages related to the Kansas Law Blog, as these are neither confidential nor secure methods of communicating with attorneys. The Kansas Law Blog should not be used as a substitute for competent legal advice from a licensed professional attorney in your state.