Case: 12-50374 Document: 00512069507 Page: 1 Date Filed: 11/30/2012
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
November 30, 2012
No. 12-50374 Lyle W. Cayce
Summary Calendar Clerk
ROBERT C. QUESADA,
Plaintiff - Appellant
v.
JANET NAPOLITANO, Secretary, Department of Homeland Security,
Defendant - Appellee
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Western District of Texas
Before HIGGINBOTHAM, OWEN, and SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges.
PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:
Robert Quesada challenges a district court’s order enforcing his Title VII
settlement with his employer. We affirm.
I.
In January 2011, Robert Quesada filed a Title VII discrimination suit
against his employer, the Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security.
In July 2011, the district court entered a scheduling order that, among other
things, required the parties to complete alternative dispute resolution. The
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No. 12-50374
parties agreed to mediation, which occurred on March 12, 2012. Quesada
attended the mediation together with his attorney. Toward the end of the
negotiations, Quesada’s attorney made an oral offer to settle all of Quesada’s
then-pending discrimination claims for $5000. As counsel for the Secretary was
unable to obtain settlement authorization that day, Quesada’s attorney agreed
to hold the offer open pending the Secretary’s approval.
On March 13, Quesada’s attorney called opposing counsel to inquire
whether the Secretary had accepted the settlement offer. On the following day,
counsel for the Secretary sent an email to Quesada’s attorney accepting the offer
and memorializing the terms of the settlement.1 On the same date, the
Secretary notified the mediator that Quesada had settled his claims. In
compliance with local rules, the mediator notified the district court, which
entered an order setting forth deadlines for the parties to exchange settlement
documents as well as a deadline to submit dismissal documents.
In accordance with the district court’s order, counsel for the Secretary
emailed Quesada’s attorney a draft settlement agreement on March 20. After
receiving no response, the Secretary’s representative sent a follow-up email on
March 21. Quesada’s attorney responded that his client was reviewing the draft
agreement. On March 22, Quesada’s attorney emailed opposing counsel with
certain suggested changes to the draft settlement documents.2 Counsel for the
Secretary responded on the same day indicating a willingness to address
Quesada’s concerns and asking for clarification.
1
The email provided that “the agency has accepted [Quesada’s] settlement offer of
$5000 to settle all claims pending or that could be asserted up to the date of settlement.”
2
Specifically, Quesada asked the Secretary’s representative to (1) remove the second
sentence from paragraph 2, (2) identify with particularity the claims Quesada was releasing,
and (3) add language indicating that Quesada was not releasing any claims against the
Department of Veterans Affairs or Office of Workers Compensation Program.
2
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No. 12-50374
No further communication took place between the parties until March 27,
when the Secretary’s representative sent an email to Quesada’s attorney
reminding him that the court’s deadline for submission of the final settlement
documents was imminent. On March 28, Quesada’s attorney responded, asking
whether the Secretary would be willing to join a motion for extension of the time
to submit the settlement documents. Counsel for the Secretary indicated that
the Secretary was amenable to an extension.
On March 29, Quesada’s attorney inquired whether the Secretary would
oppose a motion to reinstate the case on the district court’s calendar. Counsel
for the Secretary voiced strong opposition. On the same day, Quesada’s attorney
filed a motion to reinstate the case, which asserted that the parties had not
reached an enforceable settlement agreement.3 The Secretary immediately filed
a response setting forth the above-referenced chronology of events and
submitting various emails as proof that a valid agreement existed.
On March 30, the district court held a hearing to consider Quesada’s
motion to reinstate the case. At the hearing, Quesada’s attorney confirmed that
he had offered to settle the case at the March 12 mediation hearing, that he had
agreed to hold the offer open until counsel for the Secretary received
authorization, and that the Secretary had accepted the offer on March 14.
Quesada’s attorney also confirmed that he had voiced no objection to the
Secretary’s acceptance email, indicating that he believed the parties had reached
an enforceable agreement-in-principal.
The court then addressed Quesada directly. Quesada asked his attorney
to step down, claiming that the attorney had failed to communicate several key
3
In the subsequent hearing before the district court, Quesada’s attorney acknowledged
that the motion to reinstate did not reflect his personal views, and that he believed the parties
had reached an enforceable settlement.
3
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No. 12-50374
settlement demands to the Secretary.4 Quesada also insisted that no valid
settlement existed, reasoning that he had never signed any documentation.
Counsel for the Secretary objected that Quesada had never previously mentioned
any of the terms he now demanded, observing that the new terms materially
departed from Quesada’s original settlement offer. Counsel for the Secretary
urged the court to enforce the settlement as memorialized by the Secretary’s
acceptance email.
After thoroughly questioning all of the parties, the district court adopted
the Secretary’s position, concluding that Quesada’s attorney had made an
authorized settlement offer at the mediation negotiations, and that this offer did
not include the additional terms Quesada presently demanded. While the court
“recognize[d] that [Quesada] has not signed on any piece of paper,” it observed
that this fact “does not preclude the existence of a settlement agreement.” On
the same day, the court entered an order setting forth its conclusion and
dismissing Quesada’s case without prejudice.
II.
On appeal, Quesada maintains that he is not party to an enforceable
settlement with the Secretary. Quesada does not dispute that his attorney
communicated a settlement offer to the Secretary’s representative on March 12,
or that the Secretary’s March 14 acceptance email reflects the terms of that
offer. Instead, Quesada argues that his attorney lacked the authority to enter
into the settlement. Though Quesada acknowledges that he was present at the
4
Specifically, Quesada wanted the settlement agreement to provide that: (1) counsel
for the Secretary had made improper threats during the mediation proceeding; (2) the
Secretary would refrain from making improper threats in the future; (3) the Secretary would
henceforth abide by its tri-bureau merit promotion guidelines, and (4) the Secretary would give
Quesada priority consideration for any future promotions.
4
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mediation negotiations, Quesada avers that this fact “does not mean that he was
in agreement to any offer made by his former counsel.” According to Quesada,
“the record below reflects that Quesada objected to the initial settlement offer
through his emails to [his attorney].” The emails, which Quesada introduced for
the first time on appeal, are all time-stamped several days after the Secretary
accepted the March 12 settlement offer.
We review a district court’s order enforcing a settlement agreement for
abuse of discretion.5 The validity and enforcement of a Title VII settlement
agreement are matters of federal law.6 Under our precedents, “an attorney of
record is presumed to have authority to compromise and settle litigation of his
client, and a judgment entered upon an agreement by the attorney of record will
be set aside only upon affirmative proof of the party seeking to vacate the
judgment that the attorney had no right to consent to its entry.”7 Here, the
record contains no evidence that Quesada objected to his attorney’s settlement
offer at any point during the mediation or before the Secretary accepted the
offer.8 Even assuming that we can consider the new emails Quesada introduced
on appeal,9 Quesada sent those emails to his attorney several days after the
5
Deville v. United States ex rel. Dep’t of Veterans Affairs, 202 F. App’x 761, 762 (5th Cir.
2006).
6
Fulgence v. J. Ray McDermott & Co., 662 F.2d 1207, 1209 (5th Cir. 1981).
7
Mid-South Towing Co. v. Har-Win, Inc., 733 F.2d 386, 390 (5th Cir. 1984).
8
Quesada misapprehends the burden of proof in this case, urging that the record lacks
“any evidence to support the district court’s or Secretary Napolitano’s counsel’s supposition
that Quesada’s former counsel had the authority to settle Quesada’s discrimination claims.”
Under the law of this Circuit, Quesada’s attorney had presumptive authority to settle
Quesada’s claims, and the burden is on Quesada to furnish evidence to the contrary. See id.
9
See Theriot v. Parish of Jefferson, 185 F.3d 477, 491 n.26 (5th Cir. 1999) (“An
appellate court may not consider new evidence furnished for the first time on appeal and may
not consider facts which were not before the district court at the time of the challenged
ruling.”).
5
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No. 12-50374
Secretary had accepted the March 12 settlement offer. Consequently, the emails
have no bearing on the validity of the settlement.10 We conclude that the district
court did not abuse its discretion by finding that Quesada was bound by the
terms of his attorney’s settlement offer.
III.
Quesada next claims that his counsel’s defective representation violated
his Fifth Amendment due process right to effective assistance of counsel. We
have never held that the Fifth Amendment’s due process guarantee is implicated
by defective representation in Title VII proceedings and decline to do so in this
case. We ought not in fairness leave the innuendo: Quesada has introduced no
evidence to suggest that his attorney’s representation was anything less than
competent.
IV.
We AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
10
As the district court’s hearing suggests, the gravamen of Quesada’s complaint is that
he sent the emails to his attorney before signing any final settlement documents. However,
under federal law, Title VII settlements need not be in writing. Fulgence, 662 F.2d at 1209.
As Quesada’s attorney had presumptive authority to extend the settlement offer at the
mediation negotiations, the Secretary’s acceptance of that offer was sufficient to create an
enforceable agreement. See id. (“If a party to a Title VII suit who has previously authorized
a settlement changes his mind when presented with the settlement documents, that party
remains bound by the terms of the agreement.”).
6