Mason v. TELEFUNKEN Semiconductors America LLC et al
Filing
55
///ORDER granting 38 Motion for Summary Judgment filed by TELEFUNKEN; denying 39 Motion for Summary Judgment filed by Mason. The clerk shall enter judgment accordingly and close the case. So Ordered by Chief Judge Joseph N. Laplante.(jb)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Thomas R. Mason
v.
Civil No. 12-cv-507-JL
Opinion No. 2014 DNH 169
Telefunken Semiconductors
America LLC et al.
MEMORANDUM ORDER
In this action, the court is tasked with determining whether
a contractual provision for severance pay was triggered when the
plaintiff’s employment was transferred from one company to
another.
Plaintiff Thomas Mason claims that his former employer,
defendant Telefunken Semiconductors America LLC (“TSA”) assumed
the rights, duties, and obligations of his previous employer,
Tejas Silicon Inc., under his employment agreement with Tejas–including the obligation to pay him one year’s severance pay if
he was terminated without cause, or two years’ pay if he was
terminated due to Tejas’s “acquisition, merger, or buyout by
another entity.”
At least one of those two scenarios occurred,
Mason says, but TSA has yet to pay him the hundreds of thousands
of dollars, or grant him the stock options, to which he believes
he is entitled.
This court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1)
(diversity), because the parties are citizens of different states
and the amount in controversy exceeds $75,000.
moved for summary judgment.
Each party has
See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
Mason
argues that the undisputed material facts demonstrate that Tejas
terminated him in December 2011 when that company merged into
TSA, entitling him to two years’ salary in severance pay and his
vested stock options, or, at the very least, that TSA later
terminated him without cause in mid-2012, entitling him to one
year’s salary plus stock options.
For its part, TSA asserts that
the facts show that neither Tejas nor TSA terminated Mason during
the pendency of his Tejas employment agreement, and that his term
of employment under the agreement simply came to an end prior to
his termination from TSA, entitling him to nothing.
After
hearing oral argument and receiving supplemental briefing,1 the
court agrees with TSA that Mason is not entitled to severance pay
under the employment agreement, and thus grants its motion for
summary judgment (and denies Mason’s).
I.
Applicable legal standard
On cross-motions for summary judgment, the court applies the
standard set forth in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(a) to
1
Following oral argument, the court requested supplemental
briefing on whether Mason had released his claims against TSA
arising out of his departure from Tejas in December 2011 by
executing a document claiming to “absolutely and irrevocably and
unconditionally release and forever discharge” TSA from “any and
all” claims related to the end of his employment with Tejas. See
Order of May 29, 2014. Ultimately, the court found it
unnecessary to resolve that issue, since the grounds advanced in
TSA’s motion provide a sufficient basis upon which to grant
summary judgment in TSA’s favor. This order makes no further
mention of that issue.
2
each party’s motion separately.
See, e.g., Am. Home Assurance
Co. v. AGM Marine Contractors, Inc., 467 F.3d 810, 812 (1st Cir.
2006).
That standard provides for summary judgment where “the
movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material
fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
A dispute is “genuine” if it could
reasonably be resolved in either party’s favor at trial.
See
Estrada v. Rhode Island, 594 F.3d 56, 62 (1st Cir. 2010) (citing
Meuser v. Fed. Express Corp., 564 F.3d 507, 515 (1st Cir. 2009)).
A fact is “material” if it could sway the outcome under
applicable law.
Id. (citing Vineberg v. Bissonnette, 548 F.3d
50, 56 (1st Cir. 2008)).
In analyzing a summary judgment motion,
the court “views all facts and draws all reasonable inferences in
the light most favorable to the non-moving party.”
II.
Id.
Background2
The following facts are undisputed and supported by record
evidence.
In March 2009, Mason accepted a position as Director
2
The court’s preparation of this background summary (and,
indeed, its consideration of the motions in general) was
frustrated by Mason’s insistence on using the sections of his
memoranda dedicated to “a short and concise statement of material
facts,” see L.R. 56.1(a) & (b), to make substantive arguments.
As this court recently had occasion to note, this practice “is
improper and violates the Local Rules.” Galvin v. EMC Mortg.
Corp., 2014 DNH 139, 8 n.4. Counsel are advised, as were the
attorneys in that case, “that in the future, they should attempt
to keep their argument where it belongs: in the argument section
of their briefs.” Id.
3
of Product Development with Tejas pursuant to a letter agreement
(the “Employment Agreement”).
The Employment Agreement, which
stated that it would be governed by California law, recited an
effective date of April 1, 2009.
It further provided that
Mason’s employment with Tejas would last “for a period commencing
on the Effective Date and ending on the first anniversary of the
Effective Date” (i.e., on April 1, 2010), but would “be extended
automatically for additional one-year periods upon each
anniversary of the Effective Date unless written notice that [the
Employment Agreement] will not be extended is given by either
party to the other at least thirty (30) days prior to the
applicable anniversary of the Effective Date.”
And, as is
particularly relevant to the present dispute, Section 6(b) of the
Employment Agreement contained the following provisions:
If your employment with [Tejas] is terminated without
Cause, then you will be entitled to continue to receive
your base salary, payable on a salary continuation
basis following your termination of employment, for the
period of twelve (12) months. . . .
If your employment with [Tejas] is terminated without
Cause due to the acquisition, merger, or buyout by
another entity, then you will be entitled to continue
to receive your base salary, payable on a salary
continuation basis following your termination of
employment, for a period of two (2) years.3
3
It scarcely need be said, but “you” in these provisions
referred to Mason. Section 6(b) also provided for continuation
of Mason’s life insurance and health care coverage in the event
of his termination, along with the payment of any earned but
unused vacation time and the vesting of stock options.
4
(Emphasis added.)
Neither Mason nor Tejas exercised the non-
renewal provision of the Employment Agreement during the first
two years of Mason’s employment, and the Employment Agreement
thus renewed automatically on April 1, 2010, and again on April
1, 2011.
In early December 2011, the president of Tejas approached
Mason, who by that time had been promoted to the position of
Senior Director of Product Development, and informed him of
Tejas’s plans to merge with TSA.
Shortly thereafter, TSA sent
Mason a letter offering him employment in the same position at
TSA, at the same salary, beginning on January 1, 2012.
The offer
letter provided that Mason’s employment at TSA would be “for no
specified period of time,” and would be “an at-will employment
relationship” in which either Mason or TSA could “terminate the
relationship at any time, for any reason, with or without cause.”
Later that month, Mason executed the letter, attesting to his
understanding “that if I am employed by [TSA], my employment and
related compensation may be terminated at any time, with or
without cause, and with or without advance notice by me or by
[TSA].”
At more or less the same time, Mason also executed an
“Employment, Confidential Information and Invention Assignment
Agreement” with TSA that declared (in all capital letters) that,
“except as set forth in any other written agreement between me
and [TSA], my employment with [TSA] constitutes ‘at-will’
5
employment” and that the “employment relationship may be
terminated at any time, for any reason or for no reason, with or
without notice.”
Also in December 2011, Mason executed two other documents
relevant to his claims in this case.
First, in anticipation of
Tejas’ and TSA’s “corporate consolidation and reorganization,”
Mason, Tejas, and TSA signed an Amendment to the Employment
Agreement.
Under the Amendment, Tejas agreed to “transfer and
assign to [TSA] the [Employment] Agreement and all of its rights,
duties and obligations thereunder . . . effective as of January
1, 2012,” and TSA agreed to “assume and accept” those rights,
duties and obligations.
In recognition of that transfer and
assignment, the Amendment provided that “[e]ach reference to
‘Tejas Silicon, Inc.’ in the [Employment] Agreement shall be
deleted in its entirety and be replaced by TSA Semiconductors
America LLC.”
Mason also executed an “Employee Transfer
Agreement and General Release” (“Transfer Agreement”)
acknowledging that his employment would “transfer from Tejas
Silicon, Inc. . . . to [TSA] as of January 1, 2012,” such that
his “employment with [Tejas] will end as of December 31, 2011
. . . and [he] will become an employee of [TSA] effective as of
January 1, 2012.”
In accordance with the terms of these various agreements,
Mason’s last day as a Tejas employee was December 31, 2011, and
6
his employment at TSA–-again, in the same position of Senior
Director of Product Development that he had held at Tejas, for
the same salary, and also in the same work location–-began the
very next day.
Like Mason, all other Tejas employees became TSA
employees by January 1, 2012.
Mason and the other former Tejas
employees at TSA continued to perform the same work they had been
performing while at Tejas.
In late February 2012, TSA’s HR director e-mailed Mason “to
provide [him] written notice that the [Employment Agreement] will
not be extended for an additional one-year period and will
automatically expire April 1, 2012.”
The e-mail further informed
Mason of TSA’s position that his continued employment at TSA
after that date would “be in accordance with the terms of the
[TSA] offer letter, the Employment, Confidentiality and Invention
Assignment Agreement,” and various other documents Mason had
signed upon beginning employment with TSA.
Perplexed by this e-mail, Mason sought clarification from
TSA regarding his employment status in light of the termination
of the Employment Agreement.
By the end of March 2012, TSA still
had not cleared things up for Mason, and he sent TSA an e-mail
stating his position that he was entitled to receive at least a
year’s worth of salary and benefits for his termination without
cause under the terms of the Employment Agreement. (Prior to this
e-mail, Mason had not sought severance pay from TSA under the
7
Employment Agreement.)
TSA responded the very next day,
informing Mason that it had chosen not to renew the Employment
Agreement, but that the non-renewal did “not in any way affect
your offer letter from [TSA] and all other documents that you
entered into with [TSA] as part of the new hire package.”
TSA
explained that it would continue to employ Mason pursuant to the
terms of the December 2011 offer letter (which, as already
discussed, created an at-will employment relationship).
And
continue to employ him TSA did--for another month and a half,
until, in mid-May of 2012, it abruptly terminated his employment
as a part of a reduction in force.
Mason filed this action in a California Superior Court,
seeking recovery for TSA’s alleged breach of contract, breach of
the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and
violation of California Labor Code § 203 by failing to pay wages
due and owing (i.e., severance pay and stock options allegedly
due under the Employment Agreement).
TSA removed the case to the
United States District Court for the Northern District of
California and moved that court to transfer the action to this
court, see 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a), which it did.
After conducting
discovery, the parties filed the motions at bar.
8
III. Analysis
As noted at the outset, Mason’s claims are premised chiefly
on the notion that his employment at Tejas was terminated in
December 2011 due to that company’s merger with TSA and that,
under Section 6(b) of the Employment Agreement, he is therefore
entitled to two years’ salary and benefits as severance pay.
Mason’s fallback position is that either TSA’s notification of
its intent to terminate the Employment Agreement as of April 1,
2012, or its subsequent decision to release him from employment
in May 2012, operated as a termination without cause within the
meaning of that agreement, such that he is entitled to one year’s
salary and benefits as severance pay under the same section.
The parties do not dispute that the evaluation of both of
Mason’s theories turns primarily on the interpretation of the
terms of the Employment Agreement and the various other contracts
the parties entered into, and that, by virtue of California
choice-of-law clauses in each of those contracts, the court
should apply the law of that state to this dispute.
Under
California law, as is usually the case, “contract interpretation
is a legal question for the court.”
Legendary Investors Grp. No.
1, LLC v. Niemann, 224 Cal. App. 4th 1407, 1413 (2014).
This
court’s interpretation of the contracts before it cannot support
either of Mason’s theories, and thus leads to yet another
unfavorable termination for him:
the termination of this case.
9
A.
Mason’s entitlement to two years’ salary and benefits
as severance pay
As discussed in Part II, supra, Section 6(b) of the
Employment Agreement originally provided for severance pay equal
to two years’ salary and benefits if Mason’s “employment with
[Tejas] is terminated without Cause due to the acquisition,
merger, or buyout by another entity.”
Because he stopped working
for Tejas on December 31, 2011, when that company was merged into
TSA, Mason says, there can be no question that this section
applies, and that TSA, which assumed Tejas’s obligations under
the Employment Agreement, now must pay him two years’ severance
pay.
TSA, for its part, disagrees that Mason’s separation from
Tejas resulted from a merger, or, in fact, that Tejas ever merged
into it.
That disagreement is immaterial.
Even assuming that
Mason is correct that his employment at Tejas came to an end as a
result of that company’s merger into TSA, this did not trigger
the obligation to pay Mason severance under the Employment
Agreement, in light of the parties’ execution of the Amendment to
that agreement and the Transfer Agreement, and the circumstances
under which Mason stopped working for Tejas and began working for
TSA.
The Amendment, noting the “corporate consolidation and
reorganization” of Tejas and TSA, provided that TSA would assume
Tejas’s responsibilities under the Employment Agreement “as of
10
January 1, 2012,” such that the Employment Agreement would
“remain in full force and effect in accordance with its terms.”
The Amendment further provided that the Employment Agreement
would “continue under [Mason’s] employment relationship with
[TSA]” and that any reference to Tejas therein would “be deleted
in its entirety and be replaced by TSA.”
In so providing, the
parties to the Amendment plainly envisioned that, although Mason
would stop working for Tejas on December 31, 2011, Mason’s
employment itself, as created by the Employment Agreement, would
not be “terminated” in the usual sense–-i.e., it would not be
“discontinued,” Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 1289
(11th ed. 2007), or “completely severed,” Black’s Law Dictionary
1511 (8th ed. 2004).
Rather, in the language of the Amendment,
Mason’s employment would “continue,” flowing seamlessly from
Tejas to TSA.
That understanding is reinforced by reference to the
Transfer Agreement, which asserted that Mason’s employment would
“transfer from Tejas Silicon Inc. . . . to [TSA] as of January 1,
2012.”
The parties’ use of the term “transfer,” in both the
title and the text, is incompatible with the notion that Mason’s
employment was being discontinued or severed; to the contrary, it
suggests that–-consistent with the Amendment–-Mason’s employment
would merely be conveyed from Tejas to TSA.
See Merriam-
Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 1328 (11th ed. 2007) (definition
11
of verb “transfer”); Black’s Law Dictionary 1536 (8th ed. 2004)
(same).
And that is precisely what happened: as noted, Mason
continued to hold the very same position at TSA that he had held
at Tejas; to do the very same work for TSA that he had been doing
at Tejas, in the same location; and to earn the very same salary
at TSA that he had been earning at Tejas.4
4
The unambiguous language of the various documents signed by
the parties, coupled with these facts, is sufficient to establish
that Mason’s entitlement to severance pay under the Employment
Agreement was not triggered when he stopped working for Tejas and
began working for TSA, as his employment was not “terminated” as
envisioned by that agreement. Even assuming, though, that the
parties’ agreements are so ambiguous as to require the court to
resort to extrinsic evidence, see, e.g., Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co.
v. Workers’ Comp. App. Bd., 189 Cal. App. 4th 101, 110-11 (2010),
the result would be the same. Two pieces of extrinsic evidence
in particular–-or, perhaps better said, two pieces of absent
extrinsic evidence--bear noting. First, although Mason maintains
that the severance provision in the Employment Agreement “was
critical for him in taking the position” with Tejas–-so critical
that he specifically negotiated that provision with Tejas prior
to accepting its offer of employment--there is absolutely no
evidence that he ever discussed the severance provision, or his
alleged expectation that TSA would pay him two years’ severance,
with TSA at any time prior to beginning work there. It is simply
implausible that Mason, for whom severance pay was allegedly of
“critical” importance, would fail to raise this issue with TSA if
the Employment Agreement and the Amendment did, as he maintains,
oblige TSA to pay him this severance. (Indeed, given the alleged
importance of severance pay, the fact that the Amendment itself
made no specific mention of Mason’s entitlement to such pay is
itself strong evidence in rebuttal of Mason’s position.) Second,
prior to learning that TSA intended to exercise the non-renewal
provision of the Employment Agreement, Mason never once contacted
TSA to state his position that he was entitled to severance pay,
or to inquire as to why he had not yet begun receiving severance
pay. That again, is wholly implausible if, as Mason contends,
the Employment Agreement provided for severance payment in these
circumstances.
12
Mason points to two pieces of evidence in support of his
position that, despite these facts, his employment with Tejas was
“terminated” in December 2011:
the sworn statement of Tejas’
former president, Raj Johal, that all Tejas employees were
“terminated” before being “rehired by” TSA, and an exhibit to the
Transfer Agreement, which lists Mason among the Tejas employees
who were “selected for termination.”
Neither statement, however,
is accompanied by any explanation or indication of what the
declarant meant in using the word “terminated” or “termination,”
or by a factual recitation of the end of Mason’s employment with
Tejas that contradicts the evidence before the court.
Absent
such content, these pieces of evidence relate nothing more than
conclusions drawn from the facts, rather than facts themselves,
and are thus insufficient to create a genuine issue of material
fact as to whether Mason’s employment with Tejas was “terminated”
within the meaning of the Employment Agreement.
See, e.g.,
Livick v. Gillette Co., 524 F.3d 24, 28 (1st Cir. 2008) (summary
judgment affidavit must relate “facts as opposed to conclusions,
assumptions, or surmise”).
In sum, the undisputed evidence before the court shows that
Mason’s employment with Tejas was not “terminated” within the
meaning of the employment agreement, but transferred to TSA.
As
a result of this transfer, Tejas’s obligation to pay Mason two
years’ worth of salary and benefits if his employment with that
13
company was “terminated without Cause due to the acquisition,
merger, or buyout by another entity,” upon which Mason’s claimed
entitlement to that severance is premised, no longer existed.
Rather, per the Amendment, it had immediately been replaced by an
obligation to pay Mason two years’ salary and benefits as
severance if his employment with TSA was “terminated without
Cause due to the acquisition, merger, or buyout by another
entity.”
Mason observes that if he “had simply been terminated on
December 31, 2011 and not accepted employment with” TSA, “it
would be undisputed he is owed two years severance.”5
Maybe so.
But, as just discussed, that is not what happened here.
Mason
did accept employment with TSA and, in connection with that
acceptance of employment, agreed to the changes to the Employment
Agreement just discussed.
Because those changes took effect upon
the transfer of Mason’s employment from Tejas to TSA, Mason
cannot recover severance pay under Section 6(b)’s clause
governing his termination without cause due to merger.
5
Put
Mason also derides as “absurd and illogical” the idea that
he would agree “to forego twenty-four months of compensation in
exchange for four and a half months of employment.” The court
does not find it at all absurd or illogical that a person would
choose a promise of continued employment, with a mere possibility
of unemployment in the future, over certain unemployment. It is,
however, arguably absurd and illogical for a business to agree to
pay an employee two years’ salary as severance pay while also
continuing to employ that employee and pay his regular salary.
14
simply, that provision’s language provided for the payment of
severance if Mason lost his job as a result of his employer’s
merger with another entity–-not if he kept his job despite such a
merger.
B.
Mason’s entitlement to one year’s salary and benefits
as severance pay
Section 6(b) of the Employment Agreement also provided that
if Mason’s employment with Tejas–-and, after it assumed Tejas’s
obligations under the Agreement, TSA–-was terminated “without
Cause,” Mason would be entitled to severance pay equal to one
year’s salary and benefits.
Mason contends that when TSA’s
Director of Human Resources notified him in February 2012 “that
the [Employment Agreement] will not be extended for an additional
one-year period and will automatically expire April 1, 2012,”
this constituted a termination “without Cause” within the meaning
of Section 6(b), entitling him to severance pay.
The court
cannot agree.
As related in Part II, supra, the Employment Agreement
provided that Mason’s employment would last for a one-year
“period commencing on the Effective Date” of April 1, 2009, “and
ending on the first anniversary of the Effective Date.”
It
further provided that the term of employment would
be extended automatically for additional one-year
periods upon each anniversary of the Effective Date
unless written notice that this Agreement will not be
extended is given by either party to the other at least
15
thirty (30) days prior to the applicable anniversary of
the Effective Date or in accord with, or subject to
section 6, Termination.
There is one clear, compelling reason why TSA’s notice that,
pursuant to this provision, it was not renewing the Employment
Agreement cannot be construed as a termination “without Cause.”
Under Section 6(b) of the Employment Agreement, if TSA wished to
terminate Mason’s employment without cause, it was required to
“provid[e] sixty (60) days written notice” to him.
Yet, under
the language of the block quotation above, if TSA decided not to
extend the Employment Agreement at the end of the term, it was
required to give Mason only 30 days’ written notice of that
decision.
As Mason points out, this court must, “[t]o the extent
practicable,” derive the meaning of a contract “from reading the
whole of the contract, with individual provisions interpreted
together, in order to give effect to all provisions and to avoid
rendering some meaningless.”
Lueras v. BAC Home Loans Servicing,
LP, 221 Cal. App. 4th 49, 71 (2013).
Were the court to interpret
the Employment Agreement such that a notice of its non-renewal
constituted a termination “without Cause,” that would render the
provision requiring 30 days’ notice meaningless, since TSA would
already have been required to give Mason 60 days’ notice of the
termination pursuant to Section 6(b).
That result must be avoided, and the only apparent way to do
so is to exclude non-renewal from the scope of terminations
16
without cause.
Mason does not advance any persuasive argument to
the contrary.6
Though this provision is dispositive, it also
bears noting that in the common-law wrongful termination context,
California case law recognizes that “if an employer decides
simply not to exercise an option to renew a contract . . . there
is no termination of employment, but, instead, an expiration of a
fixed-term contract.”
Touchstone Television Prods. v. Superior
Ct., 208 Cal. App. 4th 676, 678 (2012).
That is precisely what
happened here.
6
Mason gamely attempts to reconcile the 60-day notice
requirement for without-cause terminations with the 30-day
requirement for notice of a non-renewal by asserting that only 30
days’ notice of a non-renewal is required because the end of a
term represents “a point when both parties understand
negotiations take place,” so that “there is less need for as much
notice as there would be if the Agreement was being terminated
mid-contract, when the employee would be less prepared for the
termination.” That may well be true, but all this does is
provide an explanation for why the Employment Agreement includes
a shorter notice period for non-renewals than for terminations
without cause. It does not explain how a non-renewal can be a
termination without cause when the Agreement unambiguously
requires 60 days’ advance notice for the latter but only 30 days’
advance notice for the former.
Mason also contends that the Employment Agreement only
“contemplates three scenarios under which [his] employment would
come to an end,” namely, termination with cause, termination
without cause, and resignation. Because TSA’s notice of nonrenewal was neither a termination with cause nor a resignation,
he argues that it must necessarily constitute a termination
without cause. This is a classic example of circular reasoning:
Mason assumes that a party’s decision not to renew the Agreement
at the end of the Agreement’s term cannot constitute a fourth,
independent scenario under which his employment could end, and
argues from that premise. The court declines to join Mason in
his exploration of this logically unsound territory.
17
In an attempt to escape the unfavorable disposition that
must inevitably follow, Mason claims that the Amendment to the
Employment Agreement changed the Agreement’s effective date to
January 1, 2012.
Under this theory, TSA could elect not to renew
the Employment Agreement, at the earliest, as of January 1, 2013
--the anniversary of the claimed “new” effective date--and its
attempts to non-renew the agreement as of the anniversary of the
“old,” April 1 effective date, and to actually terminate Mason’s
employment entirely in May 2012, therefore constituted
terminations “without Cause.”
In support of this view, Mason
points to the following language in the Amendment:
•
“[T]he Parties desire to amend the [Employment] Agreement as
set forth herein such that, effective as of January 1, 2012,
all rights of [Mason] under the Agreement are assumed by and
transferred to [TSA] and the Agreement shall continue under
[Mason’s] employment relationship with [TSA]”; and
•
“Tejas hereby agrees to transfer and assign to [TSA] the
[Employment] Agreement and all of its rights, duties and
obligations thereunder. Such transfer and assignment shall
be effective as of January 1, 2012, and in connection
therewith, [TSA] hereby agrees to assume and accept,
effective as of January 1, 2012, all of Tejas’ rights,
duties and obligations under the Agreement. Employee hereby
agrees to and acknowledges such transfer and assignment
effective as of January 1, 2012.”
The emphasized portions, in Mason’s telling, changed the
effective date in the Employment Agreement to January 1, 2012.
It is plain from their immediate context, though, that these
clauses simply refer to the effective date of the Amendment
itself–-i.e., the date on which Tejas’s “rights, duties and
18
obligations” under the Agreement would transfer to TSA–-and do
not alter the effective date of the underlying Employment
Agreement.
The Amendment stresses that the Employment Agreement
was intended to “remain in full force and effect in accordance
with its terms,” “[e]xcept as expressly modified by this
Amendment.”
When the Amendment “expressly modified” the terms of
the Employment Agreement, it did so in clear, straightforward
language, providing that (for example) “[e]ach reference to
‘Tejas Silicon Inc.’ in the Agreement shall be deleted in its
entirety and be replaced by Telefunken Semiconductors America
LLC.”
Had the Amendment also altered the effective date of the
Employment Agreement, one would expect it to have used a
similarly clear, straightforward construction.
In the absence of
such a construction, the effective date remained the same.
In sum, TSA’s notice to Mason of its intention not to renew
the Employment Agreement was not a termination “without Cause”
within the meaning of Section 6(b) of that Agreement.
Mason is
not entitled to severance pay under the Agreement as a result of
that notice.
The notice did, however, serve to terminate TSA’s
obligations to Mason under the Agreement, so that Mason’s
employment with TSA subsequent to the Agreement’s expiration on
April 1, 2012 was on an at-will basis, as defined by TSA’s
December 2011 offer letter and the Employment, Confidential
Information and Invention Assignment Agreement between Mason and
19
TSA.
When TSA later released Mason as part of a reduction in
force in May 2012, then, it was no longer bound by the Employment
Agreement, and thus under no obligation to pay Mason the
severance pay outlined in that agreement.7
IV.
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, TSA’s motion for summary
judgment8 is GRANTED, and Mason’s motion for partial summary
judgment9 is DENIED.
The clerk shall enter judgment accordingly
and close the case.
SO ORDERED.
Joseph N. Laplante
United States District Judge
Dated:
August 13, 2014
7
As a final aside, the court notes that TSA’s motion for
summary judgment treats the notion that TSA has failed to grant
Mason stock options provided for in the Employment Agreement as a
claim that is separate and different from Mason’s claim that he
is entitled to severance pay. Although he has moved for summary
judgment on liability, Mason himself does not address his claim
for stock options in his memorandum. In his objection to TSA’s
motion, Mason asserts that his entitlement to stock options is an
issue related to damages, not liability. The court therefore
considers the issue of Mason’s entitlement to stock options to be
subsumed within his entitlement to severance pay under Section
6(b) of the Employment Agreement, and does not address that issue
separately.
8
Document no. 38.
9
Document no. 39.
20
cc:
Anne M. Rice, Esq.
Mark Christopher Peters, Esq.
Irvin D. Gordon, Esq.
21
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