This is a breach of contract action. The matter is currently before the court on the plaintiff

Question:

This is a breach of contract action. The matter is currently before the court on the plaintiff Monsour’s motion to enforce an alleged settlement agreement. For the reasons stated herein, the plaintiff’s motion is denied.

Findings of Fact On March 14, 2007, Monsour’s presented Menu Maker with a written settlement offer of $420,000 by email. Counsel discussed the matter two days later by telephone, and defendant’s counsel offered settlement in the amount of $250,000. In a second telephone conference held later the same day, plaintiff’s counsel rejected defendant’s offer and counter-offered to settle the case for $400,000. Later the same day, Menu Maker’s counsel sent an email, reciting the negotiations during the day and stating, with respect to the earlier, rejected offer, ‘‘I was authorized by Mr. Graves to offer $250,000 in settlement.’’ Dick Graves is the president and sole shareholder of Menu Maker Foods, Inc.

On the morning of March 26, Monsour’s counsel telephoned counsel for Menu Maker and sought to get defendant to raise its settlement offer. Menu Maker’s counsel stated that his client would not pay $400,000 to settle, but had again authorized an offer of $250,000. Defendant’s counsel expressed doubt that his client would pay more than $300,000, and would not accept any offer that increased the settlement amount by between $50,000 and

$75,000.

Later that morning, plaintiff’s counsel sent an email stating that ‘‘if Menu Maker Foods offers $300,000, this firm will recommend the same to the Monsours.’’

Creighton Cox, the General Manager of Menu Maker, told Graves that plaintiff’s counsel had stated he would recommend his client accept an award of $300,000, if such an offer was advanced by the defendant. Cox told Graves that plaintiff’s counsel had been told it was unlikely Menu Maker would agree to a $300,000 settlement, but that the information would be presented to the company.

Graves has stated by affidavit that he believed the $300,000 figure was a rejection of the $250,000 settlement offer. He told Cox to inform defense counsel that the company would not accept a $300,000 offer. He also told Cox that he was reconsidering whether to settle at all.

At 3:51 p.m., on March 26, 2007, defendant’s counsel responded that the response of Dick Graves is that he will not pay $300,000 in settlement of this case. In truth, Dick indicated that he was getting ‘iffy’ about his $250,000 offer. According to Cox’s affidavit, the term ‘‘iffy’’ was his rather than Graves’s.

Plaintiff’s counsel responded with an email at 4:55 p.m.: I just spoke with my clients. They accept Menu Maker’s settlement offer of $250,000. The PACA lien has been negotiated down to $50,000 and we will pay it directly from our trust account. You can confirm that with Larry in Florida.

On the next day, counsel for the PACA trust beneficiaries confirmed to both plaintiff and defense counsel that it accepted $50,000 in settlement to release their judgment. The same day, plaintiff’s counsel emailed counsel for defendant congratulating them on a well-defended case, requesting defense counsel prepare a journal entry of dismissal and a release, and stating that the court had been notified of the settlement.

At 10:09 a.m. the same day, defense counsel sent an email stating: I have been unable to communicate with Mr. Graves regarding your email

‘accepting’ our $250,000 settlement offer. Given my inability to speak with Mr. Graves I cannot speak for Menu Maker and confirm that the offer was still outstanding.

What?

Val, when you and I spoke yesterday I specifically asked you if the $250 was still on the table early yesterday morning and you said it was. My notes from the conversation reference the same. That is why my 9:18 a.m. email from yesterday did not reject the 250, but advised we would recommend 300 if Dick would go to that.

Your 3:51 p.m. email from yesterday indicated that Dick would not go to 300 and was starting to get ‘‘iffy’’ about the 250 settlement offer. That is when my clients accepted the same. Your 3:51 email never indicated the 250 was off the table.

I do not remember saying that the offer was still on the table. I recall saying that I believed that it was. I would have no authority from Graves regarding whether or not the offer still lived. If I did in fact say that the offer was still on the table, I was speaking out of turn and without having first spoken with Mr.

Graves.

With regard to the statement ‘iffy,’ I was simply reporting what Mr. Cox had reported to me.

Between March 27th and March 30th, counsel for the parties continued to have conversations regarding settlement. On March 30th, defendant rejected what it viewed as an offer to settle the case for $250,000........

Questions

1. What does the court say was the effect of Monsour’s substitution of its own offer instead of accepting Menu Maker’s offer?
2. Would the result have been different if Monsour’s manifested intent to preserve Menu Maker’s offer?
3. Why do you think the court spent so much time going through the timing of all of the parties’ emails?

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