11‐2789‐cv (L)
Kroshnyi v. U.S. Pack Courier Services, Inc.
1 United States Court of Appeals
2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
3
4 _____________
5
6 August Term, 2012
7
8 (Argued: April 5, 2013 Decided: November 4, 2014)
9
10 Docket Nos. 11‐2789‐cv, 11‐4368‐cv
11 _____________
12
13 JAROSLAV KROSHNYI, PETER REDAJ, RADOMIR MALER, STEFAN HOLESA,
14 ROBERT ONDUSKO, ANDRZEJ SZYCOWSKI, JACOB IMAS, KEITH MCFARLAND,
15
16 Plaintiffs‐Appellees
17 Cross‐Appellants,
18
19 PAVEL VYSOVSKY, JANA BULIKOVA,
20
21 PlaintiffsCross‐Appellants,
22
23 JOZEF STOFA, MILAN PETRILAK, STANISLAV TELEKY, STANISLAV BULIK,
24 IRENEUSZ SAWCZYSZYN,
25
26
Plaintiffs,
27
28 –v.–
29
30 U.S. PACK COURIER SERVICES, INC., U.S. PACK EXPRESS, LTD.,
31 U.S. PACK NETWORK CORP.,
32
33 Defendants‐Appellants
34 Cross‐Appellees,
1
2 PETER GLAZMAN, U.S. TRANSPORTATION SERVICES, INC.,
3
4 DefendantsCross‐Appellees.*
5 _______
6
7 B e f o r e:
8 PARKER, CARNEY, Circuit Judges, and RAKOFF, District Judge.**
9 _____________
10
11 Plaintiffs, all of whom worked as delivery drivers for one or more
12 defendant corporations and their owner, Peter Glazman, brought this action
13 alleging violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”), Federal Insurance
14 Contributions Act (“FICA”), New York Labor Law (“NYLL”), New York
15 Franchise Sales Act (“FSA”), and other contract‐related claims. The United States
16 District Court for the Southern District of New York (Lawrence M. McKenna,
17 Judge) granted summary judgment in favor of defendants on all of plaintiffs’
18 federal claims under the FLSA and FICA, and (as relevant here) similarly granted
19 judgment to defendants on plaintiffs’ state law NYLL and contract claims.
20 Following trial on the remaining FSA claims, a jury awarded certain plaintiffs
21 damages, and the district court later granted those plaintiffs their related
22 attorneys’ fees and costs. All parties now appeal from the district court’s
23 judgment, challenging various pre‐ and post‐trial orders.
24
25 We conclude, first, that because this case presented no novel issues of state
26 law and was into its sixth year when the district court dismissed the federal
27 claims, the court did not abuse its discretion in exercising supplemental
28 jurisdiction over the remaining state‐law claims. Next, we hold that the FSA’s
29 statute of limitations bars the claims of six plaintiffs who entered agreements with
* The Clerk of Court is directed to amend the caption of this case to conform to the above
listing of the parties.
** The Honorable Jed S. Rakoff, United States District Judge for the Southern District of
New York, sitting by designation.
2
1 defendants as ostensible franchisees more than three years before filing suit. We
2 therefore REVERSE the FSA judgment in favor of those six plaintiffs. We
3 AFFIRM the FSA judgment, however, as to the remaining two plaintiffs. We
4 further VACATE the district court’s award of attorneys’ fees, and REMAND for
5 recalculation of the fee award in light of plaintiffs’ reduced recovery.
6
7 We hold also that the district court erred in ruling that the statute of frauds
8 barred plaintiffs’ breach of contract and NYLL claims for unpaid commissions: a
9 jury reasonably could find that these claims were based on oral employment
10 agreements terminable at‐will, and therefore capable of performance within one
11 year of their making. We therefore VACATE the grant of summary judgment for
12 defendants on these claims and REMAND for further proceedings consistent
13 with this opinion.
14
15 AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
16 _____________
17
18 RICHARD G. KASS, Bond, Schoeneck & King, PLLC, New York, New
19 York, for Defendants‐AppellantsCross‐Appellees and
20 DefendantsCross‐Appellees.
21
22 ROBERT WISNIEWSKI, Robert Wisniewski & Associates P.C., New
23 York, New York, for Plaintiffs‐AppelleesCross‐Appellants and
24 PlaintiffsCross‐Appellants.
25 _____________
26
27 SUSAN L. CARNEY, Circuit Judge:
28 This case calls on us to review the district court’s resolution of several
29 questions of New York law under its supplemental jurisdiction—primarily, its
30 application of certain state statutes governing franchising and wages to plaintiffs’
3
1 claims for compensation arising from their work, from the late 1980s through
2 2000, as delivery drivers for one or more defendant corporations owned by
3 defendant Peter Glazman. Plaintiffs contend that defendants systematically
4 undercompensated them for their work, purporting to treat them as franchisees
5 while reaping disproportionate profits at plaintiffs’ expense. On that basis,
6 plaintiffs filed this action in 2001, alleging violations of the Fair Labor Standards
7 Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 201, et seq. (“FLSA”); the Federal Insurance Contribution Act, 26
8 U.S.C. §§ 3101, et seq. (“FICA”); the New York Labor Law, N.Y. Labor Law
9 §§ 190, et seq. (“NYLL”); the New York Franchise Sales Act, N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law
10 §§ 680, et seq. (“FSA”)1; and various contract‐related claims.
11 Six years into in this long‐running litigation, the district court dismissed
12 plaintiffs’ federal claims under the FLSA and FICA, but elected to exercise its
13 supplemental jurisdiction to adjudicate the remaining state law claims, as to
14 which dispositive motions had been submitted.2 The district court granted
1 Although the statute is sometimes referred to as the “Franchise Act” rather than the
“Franchise Sales Act,” because the district court used the latter nomenclature (along with the
common abbreviation “FSA”), we do the same here for the sake of consistency.
2 The district court’s opinions may be found at Vysovsky v. Glassman, No. 01 Civ. 2531
(LMM), 2007 WL 3130562 (S.D.N.Y. Oct. 23, 2007) (“Vysovsky I”); Vysovsky v. Glazman, 2011 WL
4
1 summary judgment to defendants on plaintiffs’ NYLL and contract claims for
2 unpaid commissions, holding that the statute of frauds precluded any action
3 premised on defendants’ alleged oral agreements to pay those commissions.3
4 Plaintiffs then proceeded to trial on their FSA claims, which stemmed from
5 defendants’ alleged failure to comply with the Act’s registration requirements
6 and alleged use of fraudulent and unlawful practices in connection with the
7 franchise relationship. After trial, a jury awarded damages to eight plaintiffs on
8 these claims, and (as envisioned by the FSA), the court awarded those plaintiffs
9 their related attorneys’ fees.
10 Defendants now appeal the district court’s FSA rulings in plaintiffs’ favor,
11 contending principally that it was error for the district court to exercise
1842297 (S.D.N.Y. May 11, 2011) (“Vysovsky II”); and Vysovsky v. Glassman, 2011 WL 4135037
(S.D.N.Y. Sept. 15, 2011) (“Vysovsky III”).
3 Plaintiffs originally brought two different categories of claims under the NYLL:
(1) claims for unpaid wages or commissions under N.Y. Labor Law § 198; and (2) claims for
unlawful deductions from pay under N.Y. Labor Law § 193. As noted above, the district court
granted summary judgment to defendants on the section 198 claims, concluding that the oral
contract upon which those claims were based was unenforceable under the statute of frauds.
Thereafter, all but one plaintiff—Jana Bulikova—abandoned their section 193 claims completely.
And although Bulikova proceeded to trial on her section 193 claim, the jury found for defendants
on that claim. On appeal, Bulikova raises no argument related to the adverse judgment on her
section 193 claim. Thus, the only NYLL claims at issue in this appeal are the section 198 claims
dismissed at summary judgment. For convenience, we use the phrase “NYLL claims” to refer
solely to plaintiffs’ wage claims under section 198.
5
1 supplemental jurisdiction over these state‐law claims, and that plaintiffs’ claims
2 were in any event barred by the statute of limitations. Plaintiffs cross‐appeal,
3 challenging inter alia the district court’s ruling that the statute of frauds barred
4 their NYLL and contract claims for unpaid commissions.
5 For the reasons set forth below, we find no abuse of discretion in the district
6 court’s exercise of supplemental jurisdiction. We further conclude that the statute
7 of limitations barred the FSA claims of six of the eight plaintiffs. Although we
8 affirm the FSA award as to the remaining two plaintiffs, we determine that the
9 related attorneys’ fee award must be recalculated to reflect that modification in
10 the substantive award. Finally, we decide—contrary to the district court—that
11 the statute of frauds does not preclude plaintiffs from pursuing their NYLL and
12 contract claims against defendants. Accordingly, we remand to the district court
13 for further proceedings on these state‐law claims and for recalculation of the FSA‐
14 related attorneys’ fees.
15 BACKGROUND
16 A. The Parties and the Relevant Agreements
17 Defendant Peter Glazman (also known as Peter Glassman) owns or controls
6
1 defendants U.S. Pack Courier Services, Inc. (“USP Courier”) and U.S. Pack
2 Network Corp. (“USP Network”) (collectively, “U.S. Pack” or “defendants”),
3 corporations that provide package delivery services in the New York City
4 metropolitan area.4 Glazman served as president of USP Network throughout the
5 plaintiffs’ relationship with the U.S. Pack companies starting in the late 1980s. He
6 became USP Courier’s president after that corporation was formed in 1998. USP
7 Network and USP Courier share offices and employees.
8 Over the years, Glazman has sought to expand his package‐delivery
9 business through franchising (i.e., the granting of rights to others to engage in the
10 company’s business under a prescribed brand and marketing plan, in exchange
11 for a fee).5 The New York Franchise Sales Act, N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law § 683(1),
4 Two additional Glazman‐controlled corporations, U.S. Pack Express, Ltd., and U.S.
Transportation Services, Inc., were originally named as defendants in this action, but it is
undisputed that none of the plaintiffs entered franchise agreements with either of these
defendants.
5 As relevant here, the FSA defines a “franchise” as a contract or agreement, either
expressed or implied, and whether oral or written, between two or more persons by which:
(a) A franchisee is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling,
or distributing goods or services under a marketing plan or system prescribed in
substantial part by a franchisor, and the franchisee is required to pay, directly or
indirectly, a franchise fee, or
7
1 requires anyone who intends to sell franchises in the State to file an offering
2 prospectus before sales of, or even offers to sell, franchises.6 Thus, in July 1996,
3 USP Network filed a franchise offering prospectus with the New York State
4 Department of Law. That franchise registration expired, however, on February 1,
5 1998. And although USP Courier—USP Network’s successor—continued to sell
6 franchises under similar terms, it never filed a franchise offering prospectus with
7 the State.
8 A form Subscription Agreement (“SA”), which outlined the basic terms of
9 the franchise arrangement, was attached as an exhibit to USP Network’s 1996
(b) A franchisee is granted the right to engage in the business of offering, selling,
or distributing goods or services substantially associated with the franchisorʹs
trademark, service mark, trade name, logotype, advertising, or other commercial
symbol designating the franchisor or its affiliate, and the franchisee is required to
pay, directly or indirectly, a franchise fee.
N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law § 681(3).
6 The FSA provides in relevant part:
It shall be unlawful and prohibited for any person to offer to sell or sell in this
state any franchise unless and until there shall have been registered with the
department of law, prior to such offer or sale, a written statement to be known as
an ‘offering prospectus’ concerning the contemplated offer or sale, which shall
contain the information and representations set forth in and required by this
section.
Id. § 683(1).
8
1 prospectus. The SA required each subscriber to pay a $15,000 “subscription fee”
2 in exchange for the right to receive delivery assignments through USP Network’s
3 central dispatch, and entitled each subscriber to a weekly paycheck based on
4 accumulated commissions earned for deliveries made. Although subscribers
5 could pay the entire subscription fee up front, many chose to pay in installments
6 that were deducted weekly from their paychecks. Interest was due on the unpaid
7 balance, however, and as of the publication of the 1996 prospectus, USP Network
8 set the interest rate at 10% per annum.7
9 USP Network also charged subscribers a one‐time “training fee” of $50, a
10 $30 generic “weekly fee,” and a “beeper fee” of $5 to $7.50 per week. Moreover,
11 according to the prospectus, subscribers were personally responsible for a host of
12 operational expenditures, including the purchase or rental of a white cargo van
13 (for purchase, estimated at $15,000 to $20,000); insurance premiums (estimated at
14 $2,500 to $4,000); vehicle registration fees and motor vehicle taxes (estimated at
15 $60 to $110); gasoline (estimated at $25 per tank); and other items, such as
7 The term of the SA was 20 years, but the SA permitted USP Network to cancel the
agreement at any time within the first six months in its “sole discretion.” J.A. 196.
9
1 uniforms, hand truck equipment, and maps.8 USP Network treated subscribers as
2 independent contractors and, accordingly, did not withhold any taxes from
3 subscribers’ paychecks.
4 The SA provided that commission payments made by U.S. Pack to
5 subscribers for deliveries would be based principally on the “type of delivery
6 service requested [by the customer],”9 and “the distance of the delivery.” J.A. 190.
7 A “Schedule of Amounts to be Paid to Subscribers,” appended to the SA,
8 contained tables listing related payment amounts. Id. at 226‐93.
9 On various dates between 1987 and 2000, each plaintiff began to work as a
10 delivery driver for U.S. Pack.10 Almost all plaintiffs were recent Eastern European
11 immigrants, and many had limited proficiency in the English language. In
8 The SA is ambiguous as to the frequency with which subscribers would expect to incur
these costs.
9 According to the SA, U.S. Pack generally provided four types of delivery services: (1)
“Urgent Exclusive”; (2) “Economy Rush”; (3) “Same Day 5:00 P.M. Special”; and (4) “Overnight.”
J.A. 190.
10 As relevant here, plaintiff‐appellant Andrzej Szycowski began working as a driver in
the late 1980s; Jana Bulikova and Pavel Vysovsky began working as drivers in 1995; Stefan
Holesa and Radomir Maler in 1996; Jacob Imas in 1997; Jaroslav Kroshnyi, Robert Ondusko, and
Peter Redaj in 1998; and Keith McFarland in 2000. As discussed infra note 13, additional
plaintiffs were named in the original complaint, but were dismissed from the case for various
reasons and did not appeal.
10
1 deposition testimony or at trial, most plaintiffs acknowledged having signed
2 some form of written agreement with U.S. Pack; some denied, however, that the
3 document signed was the SA attached to the USP Network offering prospectus.11
4 Some plaintiffs also testified that defendants did not give them sufficient time to
5 review the documents they were asked to sign and did not provide them copies
6 of the documents, even when plaintiffs specifically requested them. In total,
7 defendants produced signature pages signed by only six plaintiffs.
8 The parties agree that defendants promised, in one form or another, to pay
9 plaintiffs a fee for each delivery completed, rather than an hourly wage. They
10 disagree, however, on how that fee was to be calculated. Plaintiffs contend that
11 defendants orally promised to pay them a 60% commission on each delivery—
12 that is, 60% of whatever the customer paid U.S. Pack for the delivery.12 Several
13 plaintiffs testified that—although they sometimes suspected they were not
14 receiving the promised rates—each time they asked defendant Glazman about
11 Several plaintiffs worked for U.S. Pack before USP Network filed its 1996 offering
prospectus. At least one of these plaintiffs was asked to sign a new SA with USP Network in
1996; he had previously signed a different agreement in 1987.
12 Plaintiff Kroshnyi testified that Milan Cuba, a U.S. Pack supervisor, told him that he
would receive a 65% commission, but Kroshnyi understood that everyone else received 60%.
11
1 their pay, Glazman reaffirmed that U.S. Pack paid its drivers 60% commissions.
2 Defendants contend, however, that there was no agreement, oral or otherwise, to
3 pay 60% commissions. Presumably referring to the “Schedule of Amounts to be
4 Paid to Subscribers” appended to the SA, Glazman testified at trial that there was
5 “a price list which we agreed to pay at a minimum to the driver,” but he qualified
6 the assertion by saying further that “the terms changed all the time, depends on
7 the client you acquire or the work you do.” J.A. 684:12‐16.
8 B. Procedural History
9 In 2001, plaintiffs filed their initial complaint,13 alleging principally
13 Plaintiffs joined and departed the suit as the case progressed. For example, Jozef Stofa
and Ireneusz Sawczyszyn were dismissed from the case before the district court ruled on the
summary judgment motion. The district court later granted summary judgment against
Stanislav Bulik and Stanislav Teleky on their FSA claims, concluding that their claims were
barred by the statute of limitations because Bulik and Teleky stopped working for U.S. Pack in
April 1997 and October 1997, respectively. Neither Bulik nor Teleky pursued any claims at trial,
and neither is a party to this appeal. The district court similarly granted summary judgment
against Jana Bulikova on her FSA claims, also on statute of limitations grounds. Bulikova does
not challenge that ruling on appeal, but she joins in the cross‐appeal from the grant of summary
judgment on the NYLL and contract claims based on unpaid commissions.
In the midst of trial, the district court also dismissed the claims of two plaintiffs—Pavel
Vysovsky and Milan Petrilak—who were unable to obtain visas to come to the United States for
trial. Vysovsky raises no arguments related to the dismissal of his FSA claims, but joins in the
arguments related to the NYLL and contract claims. Petrilak is not a party to this appeal. Thus,
only those plaintiffs listed in note 10, supra, are named appellants whose rights are being
adjudicated in this appeal.
12
1 violations of the FLSA and its state counterpart, the NYLL, as well as violations of
2 the FSA and breach of contract. Plaintiffs averred that, despite defendants’ desire
3 to treat them as “independent contractors” for tax and labor law purposes, they
4 were actually defendants’ “employees,” because defendants controlled the
5 manner in which they performed their work. Accordingly, plaintiffs invoked the
6 protections of the FLSA and the NYLL. As relevant here, plaintiffs alleged that
7 defendants violated section 198 of the NYLL, because defendants failed to pay
8 them all the wages they were owed—that is, the difference between the 60%
9 commissions they were promised and the amounts they were actually paid for
10 each delivery. The same allegations formed the basis for plaintiffs’ breach of
11 contract claims.
12 Additionally, plaintiffs claimed that defendants violated two provisions of
13 the FSA: section 683(1), which prohibits a franchisor from selling a franchise
14 without first registering an “offering prospectus” with the New York State
15 Department of Law (the “prospectus claim”); and section 687(2), which prohibits
16 fraud in connection with the offer or sale of a franchise (the “fraud claim”). As to
17 the fraud claim, plaintiffs alleged that, to induce plaintiffs’ purchase of the
13
1 franchises, defendants fraudulently represented that plaintiffs would earn 60%
2 commissions on deliveries.
3 Over the course of the proceedings, the issues narrowed. In 2007, the
4 district court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment on all federal
5 claims.14 By this point, the district court had presided over the case for six years,
6 developing an intimate knowledge of the parties and the governing case law.
7 Discovery was complete, and the case was ready for trial. The district court
8 therefore elected (without objection) to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over
9 the remaining state‐law claims. The court then granted summary judgment for
10 defendants on the breach of contract and the NYLL claims, concluding that the
11 claims were barred by the statute of frauds because they were based on an alleged
12 oral agreement to pay commissions that lacked an express termination provision
13 and thus (in the district court’s view) could not be performed within one year.
14 Vysovsky I, 2007 WL 3130562, at *7‐8, *13.15
14 The district court dismissed the FLSA claims because plaintiffs fell under that statute’s
“Motor Carrier Exemption.” Vysovsky I, 2007 WL 3130562, at *5. The district court dismissed
plaintiffs’ FICA claims brought under 26 U.S.C. § 3102, because section 3102 does not provide a
private right of action. Id. Plaintiffs do not challenge these rulings on appeal.
15 The court dismissed the other common law claims based on plaintiffs’ failure to contest
14
1 After the court’s summary judgment ruling, eight plaintiffs (Holesa, Imas,
2 Kroshnyi, Maler, McFarland, Ondusko, Redaj, and Szycowski) proceeded to trial
3 on the remaining FSA claims. The jury ultimately found the corporate defendants
4 liable on all of those claims, except McFarland’s prospectus claim under section
5 683(1). It awarded damages ranging from $3,180 to $27,839 per claim. The jury
6 found Glazman not liable, however, on the claims made against him in his
7 individual capacity.
8 After trial, defendants moved pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
9 50(b) for judgment as a matter of law, arguing inter alia that (1) plaintiffs’ FSA
10 claims were barred by the FSA’s three‐year statute of limitations, and (2) the
11 jury’s award of damages on the FSA claims contravened the court’s jury
12 instructions, which capped FSA damages at rescission.16 The district court denied
13 the motion in large part, see Vysovsky II, 2011 WL 1842297, at *2‐6, but made some
defendants’ motion for summary judgment as to those claims. Vysovsky I, 2007 WL 3130562, at
*6. On appeal, plaintiffs do not challenge that dismissal, other than of their claims for breach of
contract.
16 Before the case went to the jury, defendants moved for judgment as a matter of law on
the FSA claims, but the district court deferred ruling on the motion until after the jury returned a
verdict.
15
1 modifications to the damages awarded.17 Finally, pursuant to the FSA, the district
2 court awarded attorneys’ fees to the prevailing plaintiffs.18 The sum awarded—
3 $55,885—equaled the roughly 33% contingency fee all plaintiffs agreed to pay
4 under their retainer agreements. Vysovsky III, 2011 WL 4135037, at *1.
5 Both parties now appeal.19 Defendants argue primarily that (1) the district
6 court abused its discretion in exercising supplemental jurisdiction over the state‐
7 law claims; (2) the judgments in favor of six plaintiffs should be reversed on the
8 ground that those plaintiffs’ FSA claims are time‐barred; and (3) no plaintiff is
9 entitled to any damages under the FSA because, in accordance with the district
17 As relevant here, the district court vacated the award of damages on Maler’s and
Holesa’s prospectus claims. See Vysovsky II, 2011 WL 1842297, at *3‐4. Those two plaintiffs
entered franchise agreements in September 1996, when U.S. Pack’s offering prospectus was on
file with the New York State Department of Law. Id. Maler and Holesa do not challenge this
ruling on appeal.
18 The “Civil remedies” section of the FSA provides that persons who commit a “willful
and material” violation of sections 683 or 687 are liable for the franchisee’s “reasonable attorney
fees and court costs.” N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law § 691(1). In this context, a New York court has held
that “willful” means “no more than voluntary and intentional, as opposed to inadvertent.” Reed
v. Oakley, 661 N.Y.S.2d 757, 759 (Sup. Ct. 1996). In any event, defendants do not challenge the
district court’s conclusion that the FSA authorizes an award of attorneys’ fees under the
circumstances presented here.
19 The court entered judgment against defendant U.S. Transportation Services, Inc., as
well as the U.S. Pack defendants, but the notice of appeal does not list U.S. Transportation
Services, Inc., as an appellant.
16
1 court’s jury instructions, any such damages are capped at rescission and the
2 evidence at trial showed that each plaintiff made a “net profit” on his franchise.
3 The eight plaintiffs who prevailed at trial on their FSA claims, as well as
4 Bulikova and Vysovsky, cross‐appeal principally from the court’s summary
5 judgment ruling on their NYLL and breach of contract claims. Plaintiffs argue,
6 inter alia, that the statute of frauds does not bar these claims because, in their
7 view, the oral agreement to pay 60% commissions is an at‐will employment
8 contract that could be performed within one year of its making. In addition,
9 plaintiffs appeal the award of attorneys’ fees, arguing that the district court erred
10 in its calculation of the fee award. We address each of these arguments below.
11 DISCUSSION
12 A. Exercise of Supplemental Jurisdiction
13 Defendants contend that the district court abused its discretion by retaining
14 supplemental jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ state‐law claims after dismissing all
15 federal claims at the summary judgment stage. Although defendants did not
16 object to the district court’s exercise of jurisdiction at that time, they now argue
17 that the court should not have retained jurisdiction because it interpreted the FSA
17
1 in a novel way. Since a ruling in defendants’ favor would dispose of the appeal
2 and cross‐appeal, we address this issue first.
3 We review a district court’s exercise of supplemental jurisdiction over state‐
4 law claims for abuse of discretion. See Lundy v. Catholic Health Sys. of Long Island
5 Inc., 711 F.3d 106, 118 (2d Cir. 2013); see also Valencia ex rel. Franco v. Lee, 316 F.3d
6 299, 305 (2d Cir. 2003). District courts have supplemental jurisdiction over state‐
7 law claims that “form part of the same case or controversy” as other claims over
8 which the court has original jurisdiction. 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a). A court “may
9 decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction,” however, if, among other factors,
10 “the claim raises a novel or complex issue of State law,” or “the district court has
11 dismissed all claims over which it has original jurisdiction.” Id. § 1367(c). Courts
12 must consider “the values of judicial economy, convenience, fairness, and comity”
13 when deciding whether to exercise supplemental jurisdiction. Carnegie‐Mellon
14 Univ. v. Cohill, 484 U.S. 343, 350 (1988).
15 We conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion when it
16 decided that the “advanced stage of the litigation and the Court’s long familiarity
17 with the issues in the case, combined with the likely hardship to both parties
18
1 should plaintiff be forced to re‐file in state court” weighed in favor of exercising
2 supplemental jurisdiction. Vysovsky I, 2007 WL 3130562, at *6. By the time the
3 federal claims were dismissed, the case had been before the district court for over
4 six years. Furthermore, discovery had been completed, dispositive motions had
5 been submitted, and the case would soon be ready for trial. See Raucci v. Town of
6 Rotterdam, 902 F.2d 1050, 1055 (2d Cir. 1990) (affirming district court’s retention of
7 supplemental jurisdiction “given the extensive proceedings involving the pendent
8 claims prior to the dismissal of the federal claim”). Finally, although we
9 ultimately conclude that the district court erred in some of its interpretations of
10 New York law, the state‐law issues were not so groundbreaking as to preclude
11 the exercise of jurisdiction, especially in light of the circumstances in which the
12 discretionary decision arose. See Mauro v. S. New England Telecomms., Inc., 208
13 F.3d 384, 388 (2d Cir. 2000). We therefore affirm the district court’s decision to
14 exercise supplemental jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ state‐law claims, and now
15 proceed to the merits of this appeal.
16 B. FSA Claims
17 Defendants also appeal from the judgments entered against them on
19
1 plaintiffs’ FSA claims.20 They contend that the FSA’s three‐year statute of
2 limitations runs from the inception of the franchise agreement, thereby barring
3 any recovery for the six plaintiffs—Holesa, Imas, Maler, Ondusko, Redaj, and
4 Szycowski—who entered into franchise agreements before March 26, 1998.
5 Defendants also argue that, in any event, none of the plaintiffs can recover
6 damages on his FSA claims because the Act limits plaintiffs’ remedies to
7 rescission of the franchise agreement and return to the status quo ante. Because
8 each of the plaintiffs is alleged to have collected more revenue from his franchise
9 than he paid in franchise fees, defendants contend, applying the remedy of
10 rescission would actually require plaintiffs to return their “net profit” to U.S.
11 Pack. We address these two arguments in turn.
12 1. Statute of Limitations
13 The FSA’s statute of limitations provides that an action “shall not be
14 maintained to enforce a liability created under this section unless brought before
15 the expiration of three years after the act or transaction constituting the violation.”
16 N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law § 691(4). Plaintiffs filed their complaint in this action on
20 As noted above, the jury found the individual defendant Glazman not liable on these
claims.
20
1 March 26, 2001, alleging that defendants: (a) sold them franchises without having
2 an offering prospectus registered with the State, in violation of section 683(1) (the
3 prospectus claim); and (b) committed fraud in connection with the sale of
4 franchises, in violation of section 687(2), because they induced plaintiffs to enter
5 franchises with a false promise to pay 60% commissions for deliveries (the fraud
6 claim). For both claims, therefore, the “act or transaction constituting the
7 violation” occurred when the franchises were purchased. See United Magazine Co.
8 v. Murdoch Magazines Distribution, Inc., 146 F. Supp. 2d 385, 407 (S.D.N.Y. 2001)
9 (“United Magazine”), aff’d, 279 F. App’x 14, 19 (2d Cir. 2008) (holding that “the
10 limitations period begins to run at the time that the parties first enter into the
11 franchise agreement”); Leung v. Lotus Ride, Inc., 604 N.Y.S.2d 65, 67 (1st Dep’t
12 1993) (FSA claims based on “franchise agreements that were executed more than
13 three years prior to commencement of the action” properly dismissed as
14 untimely); see also Bayit Care Corp. v. Tender Loving Care Health Care Servs. of Nassau
15 Suffolk, LLC, 843 F. Supp. 2d 381, 385 (E.D.N.Y. 2012) (“In assessing the timeliness
16 of claims made under the FSA, courts have generally determined that the three‐
17 year limitations period begins to run when the franchise contract is entered into,
21
1 and that continuous violations do not toll the statute of limitations.” (internal
2 quotation marks omitted)). As a result, the FSA claims of the six plaintiffs who
3 purchased their franchises prior to March 26, 1998, fall outside the FSA’s three‐
4 year limitations period.
5 Plaintiffs make two arguments in support of their contention that the FSA
6 claims at issue were nonetheless timely filed. First, they argue that the statute of
7 limitations began to run anew when their franchises were “transferred” from USP
8 Network to USP Courier in April 1999—less than two years before plaintiffs filed
9 their complaint in March 2001, and well within the three‐year limitations period.
10 When the transfer occurred, U.S. Pack provided delivery drivers with a document
11 entitled “Rules and Regulations of US Pack Drivers.” The document purported to
12 be an “Agreement” between USP Network, USP Courier, and the driver.
13 According to plaintiffs, entry into this transfer agreement reflected the start of a
14 new franchise relationship.
15 In our view, however, plaintiffs’ transfer theory fails at the start. The first
16 paragraph of the transfer agreement provides that “[n]othing contained in this
17 Agreement is intended to alter . . . your Subscription Agreement with US PACK
22
1 NETWORK CORP. and/or US PACK COURIER SERVICES, INC, as the case may
2 be.” J.A. 328. Moreover, plaintiffs and defendant Glazman testified that there
3 was no change in the day‐to‐day operations of U.S. Pack or its relationship with
4 its drivers as a result of the transfer. Plaintiffs have pointed to no evidence
5 establishing that the alleged “transfer” from USP Network to USP Courier
6 constituted the beginning of a new franchise agreement that would reset the
7 statute of limitations. See United Magazine, 146 F. Supp. 2d at 407 (rejecting
8 plaintiffs’ claim that changes to their franchise agreements restarted the
9 limitations period); see also Bayit Care Corp., 843 F. Supp. 2d at 385 (noting that,
10 under the FSA, the “definition of ‘offer to sell’ excludes ‘the renewal or extension
11 of an existing franchise where there is no interruption in the operation of the
12 franchised business by the franchisee’” (quoting N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law § 681(11)).
13 We therefore reject plaintiffs’ timeliness argument made on this ground.
14 Second, plaintiffs claim that because most of them did not pay their
15 franchise fee in a lump sum when they first entered an agreement with U.S. Pack,
16 but rather paid the fee through weekly deductions from pay, defendants
17 committed a continuing violation of the FSA each time they deducted a franchise
23
1 fee payment. Therefore, plaintiffs argue, any plaintiff whose paycheck reflected a
2 deduction for a franchise fee installment payment after March 26, 1998, has a
3 timely claim.
4 This argument also fails to persuade. Although we have not yet addressed
5 the issue in a precedential opinion, at least one of the district courts in our Circuit
6 has held (in a decision we later affirmed by summary order) that under the FSA,
7 “continuous violations do not toll the statute of limitations.” United Magazine, 146
8 F. Supp. 2d at 407. Plaintiffs have failed to point us to any New York authority
9 supporting a contrary interpretation, cf. Fantastic Enters., Inc. v. S.M.R. Enters., Inc.,
10 540 N.Y.S. 2d 131, 134 (Sup. Ct. 1988) (rejecting plaintiffs’ argument that the FSA
11 imposes a continuing obligation on franchisors, because “to find otherwise would
12 serve to emasculate the statute of limitations”), and we see no reason to depart
13 from United Magazine’s reasoning under the circumstances presented here.
14 Indeed, this result is congruent, in our view, with the language and purpose of
15 the FSA, which requires certain disclosures and prohibits fraud in connection
16 with the “offer” and “sale” of franchises, but does not seek to regulate the
17 ongoing operations of a franchise. See N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law §§ 683(1), 687(2),
24
1 691(1); see also Retail Software Servs., Inc. v. Lashlee, 854 F.2d 18, 21 (2d Cir. 1988);
2 David J. Kaufmann & David W. Oppenheim, Practice Commentaries to New York
3 Franchise Act, N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law § 681 et seq., at VII(E) (McKinney 2013).
4 Thus, the statute of limitations bars the claims of all plaintiffs who
5 purchased franchises from U.S. Pack before March 26, 1998. Only Ondusko,
6 Kroshnyi, and McFarland bought their franchises after this date. Ondusko,
7 however, purchased his franchise not from U.S. Pack, but from another driver,
8 Vysovsky. Therefore, Ondusko’s claim is derivative of Vysovsky’s. And because
9 Vysovsky purchased his franchise before March 26, 1998, Ondusko’s claim is also
10 time‐barred.
11 In sum, only Kroshnyi and McFarland have asserted timely FSA claims.
12 We therefore reverse the district court’s judgment with respect to the FSA claims
13 of Holesa, Imas, Maler, Ondusko, Redaj, and Szycowski.
14 2. Available Remedies
15 We now consider U.S. Pack’s argument that the remaining FSA plaintiffs,
16 Kroshnyi and McFarland, are nevertheless barred from recovering damages on
17 their FSA claims because the Act limits their remedies to rescission.
25
1 The remedies provision of the FSA provides in relevant part:
2 [a] person who offers or sells a franchise in violation of [various
3 sections of the FSA, including sections 683 and 687] is liable to the
4 person purchasing the franchise for damages and, if such violation
5 [w]as willful and material, for rescission, with interest at six percent
6 per year from the date of purchase, and reasonable attorney fees and
7 court costs.
8
9 N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law § 691(1). Defendants contend that this provision limits
10 plaintiffs’ remedies under the FSA to rescission (i.e., the unwinding of the
11 franchise agreement and the refunding of the franchise fee, minus any profits
12 earned). Accordingly, defendants maintain, section 691(1) prohibits the award of
13 damages to plaintiffs—like Kroshnyi and McFarland—who allegedly earned a net
14 profit on their franchise. Building on that premise, defendants argue that the
15 district court erred when it refused to overturn the jury’s damages awards on the
16 FSA claims and grant judgment for defendants as a matter of law.21
17 Defendants offer primarily two arguments to support their reading of the
21 We review de novo a district courtʹs denial of a motion for judgment as a matter of law,
“applying the same standards as the district court to determine whether judgment as a matter of
law was appropriate.” Izzarelli v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., 731 F.3d 164, 167 (2d Cir. 2013). In
doing so, we do not assess the weight of conflicting evidence, pass on the credibility of
witnesses, or substitute our judgment for that of the jury. See, e.g., Merrill Lynch Interfunding, Inc.
v. Argenti, 155 F.3d 113, 120 (2d Cir. 1998).
26
1 FSA’s remedies provision.22 First, because section 691(1) provides for “damages”
2 based on any violation of the FSA, but provides for “rescission” only in cases of
3 “willful and material” violations, defendants claim that rescission must be the
4 maximum remedy available under the Act. It would not make sense, the
5 argument goes, to permit plaintiffs to recover damages that would put them in a
6 better position than a rescission remedy, because plaintiffs need not demonstrate
7 willfulness or materiality to obtain damages, but must do so to rescind the
8 agreement.
9 Second, defendants cite a related provision of the statute, section 691(2),
10 which provides that a defendant‐franchisor can avoid liability for FSA violations
11 altogether if, before the initiation of suit, the franchisor contacts the plaintiff‐
12 franchisee and offers “to refund the consideration paid together with interest at
13 six percent per year from the date of payment, less the amount of income earned
14 by the franchisee from the franchise.” N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law § 691(2). Defendants
15 claim that this provision demonstrates that the FSA does not contemplate
22 Defendants also argue that the damages available to a plaintiff who succeeds on an FSA
fraud claim under section 687 are the same as the damages available for a common law fraud
claim: that is, return to the status quo ante. As explained infra, however, we need not resolve
this question to dispose of the instant appeal, and do not address it further.
27
1 damages for plaintiffs who earned more income from their franchise than they
2 paid in franchise fees (i.e., those who earned a “net profit”). According to
3 defendants, the rescission offer under section 691(2) would not provide any
4 benefit to a plaintiff who made a “net profit” because the income earned from the
5 franchise would exceed the consideration paid; under those circumstances,
6 rescission would result only in the plaintiff‐franchisee having to hand over her
7 profits to the defendant‐franchisor. To avoid this “absurd” result, defendants
8 argue, we should interpret section 691(1) as limiting recovery under the FSA to
9 plaintiffs who suffered a net loss on their franchise. Appellants’ Br. at 15.
10 In our view, however, we need not delve into this thorny question of New
11 York law to resolve the instant appeal. Even assuming arguendo that defendants’
12 interpretation of section 691(1) is correct, and rescission is the maximum remedy
13 available under the statute, we see no reason to disturb the jury’s verdict in favor
14 of Kroshnyi and McFarland on their FSA claims. Indeed, as explained below,
15 because the district court instructed the jury in accordance with U.S. Pack’s own
16 view of the law,23 the jury’s decision to award damages to these plaintiffs under
Plaintiffs, for their part, disagree with defendants’ narrow reading of the FSA’s
23
remedies provision and argue (for the first time on appeal) that the district court erred when it
28
1 the FSA turns on the jurors’ implied factual findings concerning the calculation of
2 plaintiffs’ profits and losses over the course of the franchise arrangement—
3 findings that are entitled to substantial deference on appeal.
4 With respect to the prospectus claim, for example, the district court
5 instructed the jury that it could award rescission if the failure to register was
6 willful and material, but “[i]f you find that . . . U.S. Pack’s failure to register the
7 offering prospectus was not willful and material, then those plaintiffs are entitled
8 to an award of damages short of rescission.” J.A. 817 (emphasis added). Moreover,
9 in connection with the fraud claim, the court explained to the jury:
10 Damages for fraud must be in an amount intended to restore the
11 plaintiffs to the position they occupied before the commission of the
12 fraud. This means that plaintiffs’ damages should be an amount
13 equal to the net out‐of‐pocket expenses, which each plaintiff incurred
14 as a result of deciding to participate in the franchise. If you find that
15 any or all of the plaintiffs made a net profit on their franchise, then they are
16 not entitled to damages for their claim of fraud.
17
18 J.A. 819 (emphasis added). After receiving these instructions, the jury awarded
instructed the jury that FSA damages are capped at rescission. Because plaintiffs failed to object
to the jury instructions in the court below, however, they have waived this argument on appeal,
see SCS Commc’ns, Inc. v. Herrick Co., 360 F.3d 329, 343 (2d Cir. 2004) (“[a] party who fails to
object to a jury instruction at trial waives the right to make that instruction the basis for an
appeal” (internal quotation marks omitted)), and we perceive no manifest injustice that would
warrant reaching this waived argument here.
29
1 Kroshnyi $4,325 on his prospectus claim and $7,783 on his fraud claim. It
2 awarded McFarland nothing on his prospectus claim and $3,640 on his fraud
3 claim.
4 On appeal, defendants contend that, because each plaintiff received more
5 money in commissions from U.S. Pack than he paid in franchise fees, the jury’s
6 damages award is inconsistent with both the court’s instructions and the evidence
7 adduced at trial.24 Appellants’ Br. at 19. But what defendants are really asking us
8 to do is to reject the jury’s implicit findings of fact that plaintiffs ultimately
9 suffered a “net loss” on their franchises, and to grant judgment notwithstanding
10 the verdict. That we may do “only if the evidence viewed in the light most
11 favorable to the non‐movants, without considering credibility or weight,
12 reasonably permits only a conclusion in the movant’s favor.” Doctor’s Assocs., Inc.
24 Defendants also argue, almost in passing, that there was insufficient evidence adduced
at trial to establish a causal link between defendants’ alleged violation of the FSA’s registration
requirements and any harm that befell plaintiffs. This failure of proof, defendants contend,
provides another ground on which to reverse the jury’s verdict on plaintiffs’ prospectus claims.
We disagree, at least with respect to Kroshnyi (as explained supra, McFarland was awarded no
damages on his prospectus claim, and no other plaintiff filed a timely claim). Kroshnyi
purchased his franchise in May 1998, when no relevant prospectus was on file with the Attorney
General. In our view, a reasonable jury could infer that defendants deliberately failed to meet
their statutory obligations in this regard in an effort to conceal their unfair business practices and
facilitate sales to unsuspecting franchisees.
30
1 v. Weible, 92 F.3d 108, 111‐12 (2d Cir. 1996) (internal quotation marks omitted).
2 Indeed, there must be “such a complete absence of evidence supporting the
3 verdict that the jury’s findings could only have been the result of sheer surmise
4 and conjecture.” Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy v. Boon, 13 F.3d 537, 542 (2d
5 Cir. 1994) (internal quotation marks omitted). That is not this case.
6 Defendants contend that the franchise fees charged to each plaintiff were
7 capped at $15,000. But because both Kroshnyi and McFarland paid the fees
8 through weekly deductions from pay25 (along with 10% interest on any unpaid
9 balance), it appears neither plaintiff knew exactly how much he was charged in
10 total, and the evidence was open to interpretation.26 Furthermore, in deciding
25 According to records produced at trial, Kroshnyi grossed approximately $28,786 in
commissions in 1998, $46,857 in 1999, and $8,856 in 2000. McFarland grossed roughly $37,000 in
commissions over a two‐and‐one‐half‐year period from February 2000 to July 2002, although the
exact amount earned during each of those years is less than clear. Plaintiffs earned those
commissions, however, over the course of a brutal work schedule. Kroshnyi testified that when
he began his job at U.S. Pack, he was working twelve to seventeen (and, at times, as much as
twenty‐four) hours a day, five days per week, and sometimes weekends as well. McFarland
testified that he worked on U.S. Pack business approximately twelve to fifteen hours a day,
seven days a week.
26 We note also that, to the extent defendants are correct that the proper calculation of
rescissory damages under section 691(1) should be informed by the formula provided for pre‐
suit rescission offers under section 691(2), the starting point for calculating plaintiffs’ damages
here would be the $15,000 paid in franchise fees plus six percent interest per year from the date of
payment (here, $900 per year over a period of approximately eight to ten years). See N.Y. Gen.
Bus. Law § 691(2) (stating that a “rescission offer” is an offer “to refund the consideration paid
31
1 whether either plaintiff made a “net profit” on his franchise, the jury could
2 properly consider the significant operational expenses that each plaintiff incurred
3 in the course of running his franchise, such as the rental of a cargo vehicle,
4 insurance premiums, vehicle maintenance, taxes, tolls, and fuel, as well as various
5 other expenses like the rental of a radio and beeper, and the cost of uniforms and
6 equipment. Indeed, the evidence at trial showed that U.S. Pack deducted large
7 sums from Kroshnyi and McFarland’s weekly commission checks for vehicle
8 rental, vehicle maintenance, the lease of radios and beepers, and other charges.27
together with interest at six percent per year from the date of payment, less the amount of income
earned by the franchisee from the franchise” (emphasis added)). Thus, if section 691(2)’s
formula controls the calculation (as defendants suggest), in assessing whether plaintiffs made a
“net profit,” one must consider whether plaintiffs netted more income from their franchise than
the total amount they paid in franchise fees plus interest.
27 Kroshnyi testified that $271.15 was deducted from his pay each week for his vehicle
rental, and $24.85 per week for his radio and beeper. McFarland testified that as much as $271
was deducted weekly for vehicle rental, $50 for vehicle maintenance, and $12 for the lease of his
radio. McFarland also testified that he was sometimes charged a deduction for parking tickets,
and that he was once required to pay out of pocket for damage to his rented cargo van incurred
after an accident he claimed was not his fault.
According to defendant Glazman’s testimony, most drivers were charged about $250‐270
per week for their vehicle rental and franchise fee, so the $271 amount that both plaintiffs
recalled might, in actuality, have represented the combined cost of the franchise fee and rental.
But what matters for our purposes is that a reasonable jury could have resolved this factual
dispute in plaintiffs’ favor, finding that U.S. Pack charged each man as much as $271.15 per week
for vehicle rental alone.
32
1 And while neither plaintiff testified about the specific amounts expended on fuel,
2 insurance premiums, uniforms, equipment, taxes, and the like, the jury had before
3 it the 1996 offering prospectus and SA, which stated that drivers bore
4 responsibility for these expenses and provided an estimated cost range for each.28
5 See J.A. 162‐63.
6 Considering all of the evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiffs—as
7 we must—we cannot say that a reasonable juror would have been “compelled” to
8 conclude that plaintiffs made a net profit on their franchises. See Tuccio v.
9 Marconi, 589 F.3d 538, 540 (2d Cir. 2009) (stating that judgment as a matter of law
10 is warranted “only if, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the non‐
11 moving party, a reasonable juror would be compelled to find in favor of the
12 moving party”); see also Indu Craft, Inc. v. Bank of Baroda, 47 F.3d 490, 496 (2d Cir.
13 1995) (“[W]hen reviewing the sufficiency of the damages evidence, we are guided
28 To take but one example, the offering prospectus estimated that, as of 1996, gasoline for
cargo vans would cost subscribers approximately $25 a tank (a conservative estimate, even for
the times). To the extent the jury credited Kroshnyi and McFarland’s testimony that they spent
up to 15‐24 hours per day making deliveries throughout the tri‐state area and beyond, the jury
could reasonably infer that each plaintiff used as much as a tank of gasoline per workday,
providing a basis for the jury reasonably to attribute thousands of dollars to each plaintiff in fuel
costs alone.
33
1 by the principle that if a plaintiff has shown it more likely than not that it has
2 suffered damages, the amount of damages need only be proved with reasonable
3 certainty.”). Therefore, assuming without deciding that defendants are correct
4 that the FSA caps damages at rescission and that plaintiffs who make a net profit
5 on their franchises have no remedy under the statute, we nonetheless affirm the
6 district court’s award of damages in favor of Kroshnyi and McFarland on their
7 FSA claims.29
8 3. Attorneys’ Fees
9 The FSA provides that a prevailing plaintiff is entitled to recover reasonable
10 attorneys’ fees and costs. N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law § 691(1). On cross‐appeal, plaintiffs
11 argue that the district court abused its discretion because it failed to calculate the
12 “lodestar” value when awarding fees. Because we reverse the judgments entered
13 in favor of six of the plaintiffs on their FSA claims, as discussed above, we must
29 Although we affirm the FSA verdicts in favor of Kroshnyi and McFarland, we note that,
to the extent there is any overlap between those FSA claims and any of the revived contract or
NYLL claims pursued upon remand, the district court must ensure against duplicative
recoveries. For example, the district court might, in its discretion, require Kroshnyi or
McFarland to disclaim their FSA awards before they may recover additional damages on any
successful contract or NYLL claims. That, however, is a question we leave to the district court to
consider in the first instance, if necessary.
34
1 remand for a recalculation of attorneys’ fees in any event. Upon remand, we
2 strongly suggest that the district court begin its calculation by first performing a
3 lodestar analysis, which calculates reasonable attorneys’ fees by multiplying the
4 reasonable hours expended on the action by a reasonable hourly rate. See Perdue
5 v. Kenny A. ex rel. Winn, 559 U.S. 542, 552‐55 (2010) (addressing lodestar analysis
6 under federal fee‐shifting statute); Matakov v. Kel‐Tech Const., Inc., 924 N.Y.S.2d
7 344, 345‐46 (1st Dep’t 2011) (applying the lodestar method under New York law).
8 C. Breach of Contract and NYLL Claims
9 We turn next to plaintiffs’ argument on cross‐appeal that the district court
10 erred when it granted summary judgment for defendants on the breach of
11 contract and NYLL claims, concluding that the statute of frauds barred the claims.
12 Almost all plaintiffs testified that Glazman and others orally promised to pay
13 them a 60% commission for each package delivered.30 Defendants deny the
14 existence of this agreement. According to Glazman, he “would not disclose” to
15 drivers the amounts that customers paid U.S. Pack for deliveries because it was a
30 The lone exception, Kroshnyi, testified that when he asked a supervisor whether U.S.
Pack paid 60% commissions (a number he had heard from other drivers), the supervisor replied,
“[F]or you it’s 65 [percent].” Kroshnyi believed he was promised more because the supervisor
“always said [he] did [a] good job.” J.A. 504.
35
1 “company secret.” J.A. 645. Instead, drivers were paid according to a “price list
2 which we agreed to pay at a minimum to the driver, but the terms changed all the
3 time.” Id. at 684.
4 1. Statute of Frauds Defense
5 a. Amendment of Answer
6 As an initial matter, plaintiffs argue that the district court abused its
7 discretion by permitting defendants to amend their answer to assert, somewhat
8 belatedly, a statute of frauds defense. The Federal Rules provide that courts
9 “should freely give leave [to amend] when justice so requires.” Fed. R. Civ. P.
10 15(a)(2). Indeed, “[i]n the absence of any apparent or declared reason . . . such as
11 undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive on the part of the movant . . . [or] undue
12 prejudice to the opposing party by virtue of allowance of the amendment . . . the
13 leave sought should, as the rules require, be ‘freely given.’” Foman v. Davis, 371
14 U.S. 178, 182 (1962). We review the district court’s grant of leave to amend for
15 abuse of discretion, and, “[e]xcept when required by the demands of justice in the
16 particular case, . . . almost invariably defer to the discretion exercised by the trial
17 court.” Evans v. Syracuse City Sch. Dist., 704 F.2d 44, 47 (2d Cir. 1983).
36
1 Plaintiffs filed their second (and final) amended complaint on June 21, 2004.
2 Defendants responded with their answer on August 11, 2004. Not until
3 November 15, 2005—more than a year after filing the answer and four months
4 after the close of discovery—did defendants move to amend their answer to
5 assert the statute of frauds defense (as well as the defenses of estoppel, release,
6 and waiver). Defendants filed their motion to amend jointly with their motion for
7 summary judgment.
8 Plaintiffs contend that they suffered “extreme” prejudice from the late
9 amendment because they had no opportunity to conduct discovery about
10 whether there were any terms in the oral agreement that would prevent it from
11 being performed within one year. Appellees’ Reply Br. at 18. They also argue
12 that they were prejudiced because if the statute of frauds defense had been
13 asserted sooner, it would have affected their settlement calculations. We are not
14 persuaded.
15 In our view, plaintiffs suffered little, if any, prejudice from the grant of
16 leave to amend. Discovery was not necessary because each plaintiff was a party
17 to the alleged oral agreement and therefore, presumably, well aware of the
37
1 agreement’s terms. In any event, the district court explained that “[e]xtensive
2 discovery was conducted on the circumstances surrounding the oral and written
3 agreements.” Vysovsky I, 2007 WL 3130562, at *3. Because defendants raised the
4 statute of frauds defense in their motion for summary judgment, plaintiffs had an
5 adequate opportunity to argue against its application to this case. And although
6 the late assertion of the defense may have had an effect on plaintiffs’ assessment
7 of settlement value, plaintiffs still had ample opportunity to settle between
8 November 2005, when defendants moved to amend and for summary judgment,
9 and October 2007, when the court issued its decision on both motions.
10 Because plaintiffs have neither suffered significant prejudice from the grant
11 of the motion to amend, nor pointed to any evidence of bad faith on the part of
12 U.S. Pack, we conclude that the district court acted within its discretion in
13 granting U.S. Pack’s motion to amend its answer to assert a statute of frauds
14 defense.
15 b. Merits
16 Plaintiffs further argue that the district court erred when it concluded that
17 the alleged oral agreements to pay 60% commissions could not be performed
38
1 within one year and were therefore barred by the statute of frauds. New York’s
2 statute of frauds provides, in relevant part, as follows:
3 Every agreement, promise or undertaking is void, unless
4 it or some note or memorandum thereof be in writing,
5 and subscribed by the party to be charged therewith, or
6 by his lawful agent, if such agreement, promise or
7 undertaking:
8
9 1. By its terms is not to be performed within one year
10 from the making thereof or the performance of which is
11 not to be completed before the end of a lifetime[.]
12
13 N.Y. Gen. Obl. Law § 5‐701(a).
14
15 New York courts generally construe the statute of frauds narrowly, voiding
16 only those oral contracts “which by their very terms have absolutely no
17 possibility in fact and law of full performance within one year.” D & N Boening,
18 Inc. v. Kirsch Beverages, Inc., 63 N.Y.2d 449, 454 (1984). Indeed, “[w]herever an
19 agreement has been found to be susceptible of fulfillment within that time, in
20 whatever manner and however impractical, [the New York Court of Appeals] has
21 held the one‐year provision of the Statute to be inapplicable, a writing
22 unnecessary, and the agreement not barred.” Id. at 455.
23 Plaintiffs do not allege that the oral commission agreements contained an
39
1 express termination provision.31 They argue, nonetheless, that the agreements
2 were capable of performance within one year, because they were part of an at‐will
3 employment agreement, and New York law presumes such agreements may be
4 terminated at any time by either party. We agree.
5 Under New York law, “absent an agreement establishing a fixed duration,
6 an employment relationship is presumed to be a hiring at will, terminable at any
7 time by either party.” Sabetay v. Sterling Drug, Inc., 69 N.Y.2d 329, 333 (1987); see
8 also Reddington v. Staten Island Univ. Hosp., 511 F.3d 126, 137 (2d Cir. 2007). For
9 this reason, New York courts have consistently held that oral employment
10 agreements lacking a fixed duration are not covered by the statute of frauds,
11 because they could theoretically be terminated by either party within one year of
12 their making. See, e.g., Cron v. Hargro Fabrics, Inc., 91 N.Y.2d 362, 367 (1998)
13 (alleged oral agreement to pay bonuses as part of an at‐will employment
14 relationship not barred by statute of frauds); Hubbell v. T.J. Madden Constr. Co., 823
15 N.Y.S.2d 318, 319 (4th Dep’t 2006); Stucklen v. Kabro Assocs., 795 N.Y.S.2d 256, 257
31 Although, as noted supra note 7, the 1996 offering prospectus granted U.S. Pack the
right to cancel the franchise agreement within six months of the franchise start date for any
reason, plaintiffs have not argued that this termination provision was incorporated into their
oral agreements.
40
1 (2d Dep’t 2005); Air Masters, Inc. v. Bob Mims Heating & Air Conditioning Serv., Inc.,
2 752 N.Y.S.2d 388, 389 (2d Dep’t 2001).32
3 To support its conclusion that plaintiffs had to allege an express
4 termination provision to relieve the alleged oral commission agreements of the
5 requirements of the statute of frauds, the district court relied on Burke v. Bevona,
6 866 F.2d 532 (2d Cir. 1989). But Burke arose from a very different set of facts:
7 there, the plaintiff based his breach of contract claim on his allegation that a union
8 local promised him that he would have a job “for as long as you live,” or “for as
9 long as you want, until you retire.” Id. at 534. Because the alleged lifetime
10 employment agreement in Burke was not terminable at‐will, it would be barred by
11 the statute of frauds unless it had an express termination provision. Id. at 538.
12 Burke does not purport to overrule the long line of New York cases discussed
13 above. See, e.g., Berardi v. Fundamental Brokers, Inc., Nos. 89 Civ. 5143, 90 Civ. 0646
32 We reject defendants’ argument that the oral commission agreements were not part of
an employment agreement because plaintiffs presented themselves as “independent contractors”
rather than “employees” at the trial of their FSA claims. That plaintiffs opted to proceed on their
FSA claims after the erroneous dismissal of their breach of contract and NYLL claims does not
preclude them from pursuing the incorrectly‐dismissed claims on remand to the district court, so
long as those claims rest upon a plausible factual basis. See, e.g., Kruse v. Wells Fargo Home
Mortg., Inc., 383 F.3d 49, 55 n.3 (2d Cir. 2004) (noting that the Federal Rules “permit[] pleading
inconsistent theories in the alternative”). If plaintiffs do ultimately succeed on their breach of
contract and NYLL claims at trial, however, the district court must ensure that plaintiffs do not
receive duplicative damages.
41
1 (JSM), 1992 WL 27169, at *2‐3 (S.D.N.Y. Feb. 5, 1992) (distinguishing Burke and
2 holding that an express termination provision was not required to take the oral
3 agreement to pay bonuses to employees outside the statute of frauds).
4 We conclude, therefore, that with respect to plaintiffs’ breach of contract
5 and NYLL claims, the district court erred in granting summary judgment for
6 defendants based on the statute of frauds defense.
7 2. Waiver Defense
8 Finally, we briefly address defendants’ argument that even if plaintiffs’
9 breach of contract and NYLL claims are not barred by the statute of frauds, we
10 may affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment on the alternative
11 ground that plaintiffs, by their course of conduct, impliedly waived these claims.
12 Waiver is “the voluntary and intentional abandonment of a known right which,
13 but for the waiver, would have been enforceable.” Nassau Trust Co. v. Montrose
14 Concrete Prods. Corp., 56 N.Y.2d 175, 184 (1982). Implied waiver may be found
15 where a party exhibits “such conduct or failure to act as to evince an intent not to
16 claim the purported advantage.” Hadden v. Consolidated Edison Co. of N.Y., 45
17 N.Y.2d 466, 469 (1978). It is well established, however, that “negligence,
42
1 oversight, or thoughtlessness” does not create a waiver, and waiver “cannot be
2 inferred from mere silence.” Peck v. Peck, 649 N.Y.S.2d 22, 23 (2d Dep’t 1996).
3 Defendants assert that plaintiffs knew they were not paid 60%
4 commissions on each delivery but failed to object to the calculation of their
5 commission payments until the filing of this lawsuit. Although plaintiffs’ weekly
6 commission statements made no reference to the delivery fees customers paid to
7 U.S. Pack, defendants argue that plaintiffs could have deduced how much
8 customers were paying by “speaking with the customers” or “reading U.S. Pack’s
9 advertising materials,” Appellants’ Reply Br. at 9, and from that data, calculated
10 the amounts they claimed to be owed. They also contend that four plaintiffs
11 (Holesa, Imas, Ondusko, and Szycowski) admitted that they did not believe they
12 were receiving 60% commissions, and yet they continued to deliver packages for
13 U.S. Pack. Therefore, defendants argue, plaintiffs “acquiesced in the way they
14 were being paid” and waived any right to collect 60% commissions. Id. at 10.
15 Based on our review of the record, we conclude that plaintiffs have at the
16 very least raised a genuine issue of fact as to whether they voluntarily and
17 intentionally abandoned their right to collect 60% commissions, thus precluding
43
1 us from affirming summary judgment for defendants on this alternative basis. See
2 Voest‐Alpine Int’l Corp. v. Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., 707 F.2d 680, 685 (2d Cir.
3 1983) (stating that where waiver is not established “directly, unmistakably or
4 unequivocally,” issue of intent to waive right is “properly left to the trier of fact”).
5 A jury could conclude that plaintiffs, most of whom had limited proficiency in
6 English, were unaware that they were not receiving 60% commissions. Plaintiffs’
7 inability or failure to compare U.S. Pack’s advertising materials to their
8 commission statements is at least as consistent with mere “negligence, oversight,
9 or thoughtlessness,” which is not enough to create waiver, as it is with the
10 “voluntary and intentional abandonment of a known right.” The testimony by
11 Holesa, Imas, Ondusko and Szycowski also fails to establish that those plaintiffs
12 knew that they were not receiving 60% commission payments and voluntarily and
13 intentionally waived that right.33 Therefore, the district court’s grant of summary
14 judgment for defendants on the breach of contract and NYLL claims cannot be
33 Although Imas “started suspecting” at the end of the 1990s that he was not receiving
60% commissions, J.A. 451, he also testified that “I have no proof, only suspicions,” J.A. 438, and
that when drivers asked, “[A]re we still making 60?” at company meetings, Glazman would
respond, “[N]othing changed. Everything like used to be.” J.A. 438. Holesa and Szycowski
testified similarly. Ondusko testified that he began to suspect he was not receiving 60%
commissions only “[a]fter the case began.” J.A. 614.
44
1 upheld under defendants’ alternative theory of waiver.
2 * * * *
3 In sum, we conclude that the FSA’s statute of limitations runs from the
4 inception of the plaintiffs’ franchise relationships with defendants. Accordingly,
5 the statute of limitations bars the claims of the six plaintiffs (Holesa, Imas, Maler,
6 Ondusko, Redaj, and Szycowski) who began working for U.S. Pack more than
7 three years before the filing of the complaint. We nevertheless affirm the jury’s
8 award of FSA damages to plaintiffs Kroshnyi and McFarland, both of whom filed
9 timely claims. We further conclude, however, that the district court erred in
10 granting summary judgment on plaintiffs’ breach of contract and NYLL claims
11 based on the statute of frauds. A jury could find that the oral agreements to pay
12 60% commissions were employment agreements, presumed terminable at‐will,
13 and thus capable of performance within one year. The statute of frauds therefore
14 does not bar their enforcement. We have considered the parties’ remaining
15 arguments and find them to be without merit.
16
17
45
1 CONCLUSION
2 For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment in
3 favor of Kroshnyi and McFarland on their FSA claims, but REVERSE the district
4 court’s judgment in favor of the other six plaintiffs (Holesa, Imas, Maler,
5 Ondusko, Redaj, and Szycowski). We also VACATE the district court’s award of
6 attorneys’ fees on the FSA claims and REMAND for reconsideration and
7 recalculation of the award. Finally, we VACATE the district court’s grant of
8 summary judgment on the breach of contract and NYLL claims and REMAND to
9 the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
46