Opinion
The appellant, American Software, Inc., appeals from a decision of the trial court granting a former employee, respondent Melane Ali, unpaid commissions based upon software sales she generated while in American Software’s employ but which were remitted by customers after she voluntarily severed her employment. The key issue in this appeal is whether a provision of Ali’s employment contract which, generally speaking, terminates her right to receive commissions on payments received on her accounts 30 days after severance of her employment is unconscionable, and therefore, unenforceable. The trial court found that Ali was entitled to recover the disputed commissions because this contractual provision was unconscionable. We disagree and reverse.
Facts
Ali was an account executive for American Software from September 5, 1991, to March 2, 1994. The employment relationship commenced after Ali was approached by a professional recruiter on behalf of American Software and was terminated when Ali voluntarily resigned because she had a job offer from one of American Software’s competitors. Ali was hired to sell and market licensing agreements for software products to large companies. These products are designed to the customer’s specifications for the purpose of integrating the customer’s accounting, manufacturing, sales and distribution processes.
*1389 In exchange for her services, American Software agreed to pay Ali a base monthly salary plus a draw. If products were sold during the month, any commissions paid were reduced by the amount of the draw. However, the draw portion of the salary was paid regardless of whether or not the salesperson earned commissions to cover the draw. Any negative amount would be carried over from month-to-month until such time as the commissions were large enough to cover the previous draws, or until such time as the employment relationship was severed. If the amount of draws exceeded commissions at the time of termination, American Software would suffer the loss. At the time of her resignation, Ali’s annual guaranteed salary, exclusive of commissions, was $75,000. Her base monthly salary was $3,333 per month and her nonrefundable draw was $2,917.
The terms and conditions of Ali’s employment were set out in a written contract which was prepared by American Software. Ali reviewed the contract, and had an attorney, who she described as a “buddy,” review it prior to employment. Of pertinence to the instant controversy, the contract included the specific circumstances under which Ali was to receive commissions after termination of employment with American Software. The employment agreement first states that “ [commissions are considered earned when the payment is received by the Company.” It goes on to provide: “In the event of termination, the right of all commissions which would normally be due and payable are forfeited 30 days following the date of termination in the case of voluntary termination and 90 days in the case of involuntary termination.”
Based on her testimony at trial, there is no question that Ali was aware of this provision prior to her execution of the agreement and commencement of work at American Software. She testified she reviewed the two-and-one-half-page contract for one-half hour and caused certain handwritten deletions and revisions to be made to it, most notably deleting a provision requiring her to reimburse American Software $5,000 for the recruiter’s fee in the event that she terminated her employment within a year. Ali testified that she signed the employment contract even though she believed certain provisions were unenforceable in California.
After Ali left American Software’s employment, she sought additional commissions in connection with transactions with IBM and Kaiser Foundation Health Plan. American Software received payment from both companies more than 30 days after Ali’s resignation.
After Ali’s claim for unpaid commissions was denied by the Labor Commissioner, she sought de novo review in the superior court. (Lab. Code, *1390 § 98.2.) The trial court awarded Ali approximately $30,000 in unpaid commissions after finding that the contract provision regarding postemployment commissions was unconscionable and thus, unenforceable. The trial court found the evidence “overwhelming that the forfeiture provision inures to the benefit of the party with superior bargaining power without any indication of a reason for tying such benefit to the timing of a payment, rather than to the service actually provided in completing the sale.” American Software timely appealed.
Discussion
In 1979, our Legislature enacted Civil Code section 1670.5, which codified the established doctrine that a court can refuse to enforce an unconscionable provision in a contract.
1
(For a review of the legislative history of Civ. Code, § 1670.5, see
IMO Development Corp.
v.
Dow Corning Corp.
(1982)
Most California cases analyze unconscionability as having two separate elements—procedural and substantive.
2
(See, e.g.,
Shaffer
v.
Superior Court
(1995)
Indicia of procedural unconscionability include “oppression, arising from inequality of bargaining power and the absence of real negotiation or a meaningful choice” and “surprise, resulting from hiding the disputed term in a prolix document.”
(Vance
v.
Villa Park Mobilehome Estates, supra,
The critical juncture for determining whether a contract is unconscionable is the moment when it is entered into by both parties—not whether it is unconscionable in light of subsequent events. (Civ. Code, § 1670.5.) Unconscionability is ultimately a question of law for the court.
(Ilkhchooyi
v.
Best, supra,
In assessing procedural unconscionability, the evidence indicates that Ali was aware of her obligations under the contract and that she voluntarily agreed to assume them. In her business as a salesperson it is reasonable to assume she had become familiar with contracts and their importance. In fact, in Ali’s testimony, she indicated that as part of her responsibilities for American Software, she helped negotiate the terms of a contract with IBM representing over a million dollars in sales. The salient provisions of the employment contract are straightforward, and the terms *1392 used are easily comprehensible to the layman. She had the benefit of counsel. 3 Nor is this a situation in which one party to the contract is confronted by an absence of meaningful choice. The very fact that Ali had enough bargaining “clout” to successfully negotiate for more favorable terms on other provisions evidences the contrary. She admits that she was aware of the postemployment commissions clause, but did not attempt to negotiate for less onerous terms. 4 In short, this case is a far cry from those cases where fine print, complex terminology, and presentation of a contract on a take-it-or-leave-it basis constitutes the groundwork for a finding of unconscionability.
Nor do we find substantive unconscionability. Ali’s arguments of substantive unconscionability rest largely on events that occurred several years after the contract was entered into—her loss of sizable commissions on sales she had solicited during her employment but where payment was delayed for various reasons so that it was not received within 30 days after her departure. However, as indicated by the very wording of California’s unconscionability statute, we must analyze the circumstances as they existed “at the time [the contract] was made” to determine if gross unfairness was apparent at that time. (Civ. Code, § 1670.5, subd. (a).)
When viewed in light of the circumstances as they existed on August 23, 1991, when the instant contract was executed, we cannot say the contract provision with respect to compensation after termination was so unfair or oppressive in its mutual obligations as to “shock the conscience.”
(California Grocers Assn.
v.
Bank of America, supra,
Our survey of case law indicates that the contract provision challenged here is commonplace in employment contracts with sales representatives, such as Ali, who have ongoing responsibilities to “service” the account once the sale is made. (See, e.g.,
Chretian
v.
Donald L. Bren Co.
(1984)
Nor do we find that the terms of this contract represent “an overly harsh allocation of risks . . . which is not justified by the circumstances under which the contract was made.”
(Carboni
v.
Arrospide, supra,
Much of the parties’ arguments in this case revolve around
Ellis
v.
McKinnon Broadcasting Co.
(1993)
Despite the many analogous facts and issues, we reach a different conclusion than
Ellis.
In this instance, the conflicting result can most easily be explained by the fact that the
Ellis
court closely followed the
A&M Produce
analytical structure in considering whether the commissions provision was “reasonable”—an approach we have specifically rejected in favor of the more rigorous “shock the conscience” standard enunciated in
California Grocers Assn.
v.
Bank of America supra,
In the present case, there are no unclear or hidden terms in the employment agreement and no unusual terms that would shock the conscience, all leading to the conclusion that the contract accurately reflects the reasonable expectations of the parties. Overall, the evidence establishes that this employment contract was the result of an arm’s-length negotiation between two sophisticated and experienced parties of comparable bargaining power and is *1395 fairly reflective of prevailing practices in employing commissioned sales representatives. Therefore, the contract fails to qualify as unconscionable.
The judgment is reversed. Costs are awarded to American Software, Inc.
Peterson, P. J., and Haning, J., concurred.
Notes
The statute provides in pertinent part: “If the court as a matter of law finds the contract or any clause of the contract to have been unconscionable at the time it was made the court may refuse to enforce the contract, or it may enforce the remainder of the contract without the unconscionable clause, or it may so limit the application of any unconscionable clause as to avoid any unconscionable result.” (Civ. Code, § 1670.5, subd. (a).)
Our Supreme Court has noted that the division of the unconscionability analysis into procedural and substantive elements should lead to the same result as the analytical framework expressed in
Graham
v.
Scissor-Tail, Inc.
(1981)
Some courts have considered the presence and advice of counsel to constitute circumstantial, if not conclusive, evidence that a contract is not unconscionable. (See e.g.,
Resource Management Co.
v.
Weston Ranch
(Utah 1985)
A company representative testified at trial that a number of individuals have successfully negotiated for modification of this provision.
Civil Code section 1670.5 was adopted verbatim from Uniform Commercial Code section 2-302. The legislative committee comment to section 1670.5 states: “The Assembly declares its intent, therefore, that the Official Code Comments to Uniform Commercial Code Section 2-302 prepared by the American Law Institute and National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, ... be used as an aid to interpretation of Section 1670.5.” (Legis. committee com., Deering’s Ann. Civ. Code (1994 ed.) § 1670.5, p. 328.) (See
Carboni
v.
Arrospide, supra,
