ORDER
This matter is before the Court on a motion in limine filed by the Block defendants (“Block”) to exclude evidence relating to settlement offers and discussions. (Doc. 208). The parties have filed briefs in support of their respective positions, (Docs. 209, 225, 239, 282), and the motion is ripe for resolution. After carefully considering the foregoing materials, the Court concludes that the motion is due to be denied.
BACKGROUND
In 1999, Block was engaged in litigation with a number of its major franchisees (“the Missouri litigation”). Armstrong Business Services, Inc., (“ABS”), one of the plaintiffs herein, was a party to that lawsuit. (Doc. 209 at 2). The parties engaged in settlement negotiations in October 1999 and, the following month, a representative of the major franchisees sent Block a letter summarizing what he believed to be the parties’ agreement for settlement of the Missouri litigation. (Id. at 2-3 & Exhibit 1). Under a paragraph entitled, “Term of Contract,” the letter contemplates amending each existing franchise agreement to provide for a 60-year term with automatic 10-year renewal periods and to provide Block, at the conclusion of each such interval, a purchase option “at a price equal to four times gross revenues,” (“the multiplier”), subject to certain deductions. (Id.). 1 No settlement along these lines was finalized. (Id. at 9).
The parties herein operated under franchise agreements providing that, in the event of termination for any reason other than sale to Block, “Block shall pay a fair and equitable price to Franchisee for
DISCUSSION
I. Rule 408.
Evidence of ... offering or promising to furnish ... a valuable consideration in compromising a claim which was disputed as to either validity or amount, is not admissible to prove liability for or invalidity of the claim or its amount. Evidence of conduct or statements made in compromise negotiations is likewise not admissible.
Fed.R.Evid. 408. Block concedes that the November 1999 letter constituted a “settlement offer,” 2 and the plaintiffs concede that they intend to use the letter and the multiplier found therein to prove the amount of their claim for a fair and equitable price. The parties’ only real disagreement focuses on the scope of the words, “claim” and “disputed.”
By its terms, Rule 408 precludes the admission of evidence concerning an offer to compromise “a claim” for the purpose of proving (or disproving) the fact or amount of “the claim.” Gauged either by standard usage of the English language or by accepted rules of statutory construction, the definite article “the” limits “the claim” as to which evidence may not be admitted to the сlaim previously referenced, i.e., the claim which was the subject of a settlement offer.
3
Thus, “Rule 408 excludes evidence of settlement offers only if such evidence is offered to prove liability for or invalidity [or amount]
of the claim under negotiation.” Vulcan Hart Corp. v. National Labor Relations Board,
Block’s filings demonstrate that it cannot meet this “same claim” requirement. In its opening brief, Block insists that the November 1999 settlemеnt proposal “was intended to resolve a panoply of issues, but the ‘fair and equitable’ price of ABS’s business was not among them.” (Doc. 209 at 9 n. 5). This language appears to constitute an admission that the “fair and equitable price” provision of paragraph 24 was not part of the November 1999 settlement proposal and thus not a “claim” as to which a settlement offer has been made for purposes of Rule 408. Belatedly realizing its conundrum, Block in its reply brief reverses course, noting that by the time the settlement negotiations occurred and the November 1999 settlement proposal сirculated, Block had filed a counterclaim seeking a declaration that it was entitled not to renew the major franchisees’ franchise agreements when their current terms ended. Because such a non-renewal would trigger the payment obligations of paragraph 24, Block suggests that the calculation of a “fair and equitable price” was “a necessary part of the complex of issues that the parties sought to resolve in the 1999 mediation.” (Doc. 239 at 6).
Even if Block had not already admitted the exact opposite, its reconsidered position would fail. Block’s counterсlaim in the Missouri litigation may well represent a “claim” under Rule 408 as to whether Block could lawfully non-renew, and it may well be that this claim was both “disputed” and encompassed sub silentio within the November 1999 settlement proposal. However, a disputed claim as to whether non-renewal could properly occur is not a disputed claim as to the payment due upon non-renewal. 5 It could certainly blossom into such a disputed claim should the parties take conflicting stands on the amount that would be owed, but it does not itself constitute such a disputed claim.
It is likely that, had anyone asked the partiеs to the Missouri litigation what they perceived as the measure of a “fair and equitable price” under paragraph 24, they would have given responses as divergent as those they offer today. That they may have held such secret opinions, however, cannot establish the existence of “a claim which was disputed” at the time of the November 1999 settlement proposal. A “claim” under Rule 408 involves the assertion of a right. This is shown both by common usage
6
and by the rule’s requirement that the claim be disputed, as one can hardly dispute a claim of which he is unaware.
7
Similarly, for a claim to be “disputed,” there must be “at least an apparent difference of opinion between the
In summary, the calculation of a fair and equitable price was not an issue, and was not a “claim that was disputed,” as of the November 1999 settlement proposal. Block, however, argues that the valuation of fair and equitable price need not itself have been a disputed claim in the Missouri litigation so long as it is satisfactorily related to the parties’ actual disputed claims. In support, Block citеs to a line of cases applying Rule 408 to prohibit either the plaintiff or the remaining defendant from introducing evidence of the plaintiffs settlement with other defendants or potential defendants.
See, e.g., Branch v. Fidelity & Casualty Co.,
The “same transaction” test predates Rule 408 by at least four decades.
11
As in the cases cited above, it has often been applied in situations involving one plaintiff, multiple wrongdoers and one event, although it has also been applied in situations involving multiple plaintiffs, one wrongdoer and one event.
12
Use of a “same transaction” test in such circum
Undeterred, Block cites an appellate opinion applying “same transaction” terminology to a fact pattern far removed frоm those originally associated with “same transaction” analysis. In
Fiberglass Insulators, Inc. v. Dupuy,
Block’s final authority,
Bradbury v. Phillips Petroleum Co.,
Bradbury
matches the farthest known expansion of Rule 408,
14
but it is one the
The Eleventh Circuit’s dubiousness is justified. Since Rule 408’s enactment in 1974, excluding evidence of settlements and offers has depended on a showing that the “same claim” was the subject of both the prior discussions and the lawsuit in which the evidence is offered. Applying the rule to non-contemporaneous incidents involving third parties and “related” to the subject litigation only by the identity of the defendant and the “similar[ity]” of the conduct would effectively read the “same claim” requirement out of existence.
Dupuy, because it purported to apply the “same transaction” standard, presents a more subtle error. As noted, the “same transaction” test can sometimes be consistent with the “same claim” requirement of Rule 408, as when the test is applied to a single event involving multiple parties and resulting in multiple grievances. However, because the reach of the term “transaction” is much broader than that of the term “claim,” the indiscriminate use of “same transaction” in lieu of “same claim” will inevitably result in applications of Rule 408 beyond its proрer confines. Du-puy represents such an example. Whether or not five or six lawsuits spanning eight years following the dissolution of a business relationship can reasonably be viewed as constituting a single transaction, by no known measurement can causes of action regarding dissolution and a cause of action regarding antitrust violations occurring years later be viewed as a single claim.
It may be assumed for present purposes that application of Dupuy to the facts of this case would result in the invocation of Rule 408 to exclude evidence of the November 1999 settlement proposal despite the fact that the calculation of a fair and equitable price under paragraph 24 was not covered by the proposal and was not even contested by the parties until long afterwards, on the theory that all disputes ever arising out of the parties’ franchise agreements, regardless of when they arose, did so out of a single “transaction” represented by those agreements. The Court, however, is persuaded that the Eleventh Circuit would not adopt an interpretation of Rule 408 so at war with its language.
The Eleventh Circuit’s decisions in which Rule 408 was deemed applicable tend to be unremarkable applications of the rule unmistakably involving the same claim as was involved in the preceding settlement negotiations.
15
While the Court appears to have embraced the original “same transaction” standard,
16
it has brushed off the suggestion that it extend that rule beyond its historical confines.
Block, like most of its authorities, appeals to public policy in favor of its approach. There is no question that both the drafters and the enacting Congress perceived the purpose of Rule 408 as the encouragement of negotiated settlements, 18 and the Eleventh Circuit has repeatedly recognized this philosophical impetus to the rule. 19 Courts, however, enforce rules, not simply the policy prompting their enactment, and Rule 408 cannot be extended beyond the reach its language will allow, regardless of the policy implications. 20 It may be noted, however, that most rules of law are crafted to balance competing concerns, and their language is usually chosen carefully in an effort to strike the desired compromise among those concerns. Rule 408’s рolicy of encouraging settlements is necessarily in tension with the policy behind Rule 402 of placing relevant evidence before the factfinder. Nothing would be less surprising than to learn that the “same claim” requirement of Rule 408 represents a deliberate balancing of those conflicting goals.
Block has offered no supportable basis for concluding that the present lawsuit concerning the fair and equitable price of the plaintiffs’ franchise agreements is the same claim that was the subject of Block’s settlement offer in the Missouri litigation. Accordingly, the Court concludes that Rule 408 does nоt bar the plaintiffs’ usage of the November 1999 settlement proposal or evidence of its multiplier in this litigation.
II. Rule 402.
“Evidence which is not relevant is not admissible.” Fed.R.Evid. 402. Block
In its reply brief Block changes tack, arguing the settlement proposal is irrelevant as a matter of logical necessity. According to Block, if the calculation of a fair and equitable price was not a “claim which was disputed” at the time of the November 1999 settlement proposal (and, as discussed in Part I, it was not), then it cannot be relevant to that calculation. Block’s position will come as a surprise to those involved in real estate, where the purchase price of other property is the bedrock of valuation. That Block was willing to pay four times gross revenues in exercising a decennial option to purchase a franchise surely says something about the fair and equitable price of the same franchise upon its termination, just as the sales price of one piece of property says something about the fair market value of another. How much it says, as in the real property context, depends on an evaluation of similarities and dissimilarities but, except on a showing of gross differences rendering any comparison untenable, that weighing is for the jury, not the Court as gatekeeper under Rule 402.
Block identifies only a single difference between its November 1999 settlement proposal and present fair and equitable price: when the proposal was made, Block was concerned that its franchise agreements could be ruled perpetual, but in 2002 the Missouri Court of Appeals ruled they would expire naturally at the conclusion of any five-year term absent mutual agreement to renew. (Doc. 239 at 8 n. 2).
24
It is reasonable to suppose that Block would be willing to pay mоre for a franchise that it can obtain only on the consent of the franchisee than it would pay when it can end the franchise unilaterally by refusing to renew. The difficulty is that Block has failed to show that the “fair and equitable price” of a franchise under paragraph 24 is to be based on Block’s bargain
Because Block has not drawn into question the November 1999 settlement proposal’s “tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence,” Fed.R.Evid. 401, Rule 402 does not bar the plaintiffs’ usage of the settlement proposal or evidence of its multiplier in this litigation.
III. Rule 403.
“Although relevant, evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues [or] misleading the jury .... ” Fed.R.Evid. 403.
Block argues that it “would be substantially prejudiced were ABS permitted to flaunt a proposed settlement term as the purported actual value of its business.” (Doc. 209 at 11). The point of all evidence presented at trial is to рrejudice the opponent; Rule 403 is implicated only when such prejudice is “unfair.” Block does not allege that introduction of the November 1999 settlement proposal risks unfairly prejudicing it, much less attempt to show that any such risk “substantially out-weights]” the evidence’s probative value. 26
Block makes two related arguments concerning jury confusion. First it posits that the November 1999 settlement proposal will itself confuse the jury. Second, it argues that, if the settlement proposal and its multiplier are not excluded, it intends to offer evidence of its (presumably smaller) payments to other franchisees under рaragraph 24 upon termination of their franchise agreements following the Missouri litigation. The resulting “battle of settlement proposals,” Block argues, will only confuse the jury. (Doc. 209 at 11).
Block has not explained how the November 1999 settlement proposal risks confusing the jury, much less how any such risk substantially outweighs the proposal’s probative value. Assuming without deciding that evidence of Block’s other “settlement proposals” is otherwise admissible under Rule 408 and other rules, Block has not explained why, if its evidence stands to confuse the jury, the plaintiffs’ evidence should be excluded as a cure.
In summary, Rule 403 does not require exclusion of the November 1999 settlement proposal or evidence of its multiplier in this litigation.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, Block’s motion in limine to exclude evidence relating to settlement offers and discussions is denied.
Notes
. Block terms the letter a " proposed new franchise agreement.” (Id. at 9). It has not, however, challenged the letter's representation that Block had agreed in principle to the terms expressed therein. On the contrary, Block describes the multiplier as part of "the settlement offer made by Block in 1999.” (Id. at 8; accord id. at 10).
. (Doc. 209 at 8). Thus, only the first sentence of Rule 408 is implicated.
.
See, e.g., Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary
1221 (10th ed.1994)("the” is "used as a function word to indicate that a following noun or noun equivalent is definite or has been previously specified by context or by circumstance”);
American Bus Association v. Slater,
.Accord Uformal/Shelby Business Forms, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board,
. It is hardly unusual for parties to disagree as to whether their contractual relations can be terminated while agreeing as to the financial implications of such a termination should it occur.
. See Black's Law Dictionary 240 (7th ed,1999)(defining "claim,” in part, as “[t]he assertion of an existing right”).
. Assertion of a claim for purposes of Rule 408 does not require articulation of a specific
.
Cf.
S.A.
Healy Co. v. Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District,
.
See Branch v. Fidelity & Casualty,
. Jack B. Weinstein, Margaret A. Berger & Joseph M. McLaughlin, 2 Weinstein's Evidence ["Weinstein's ”] ¶ 408[04] at 408-30 (1996)("A more common situation involves the attempted use of a completed compromise of a claim arising out of the same transaction between a third person and a party to the suit being litigated. Rule 408 codifies the general practice of the federal courts in making compromise agreements inadmissible in such circumstances, as proof of liability for, or invalidity of, the claim.”)(footnotes omitted).
.
See Hawthorne v. Eckerson Co.,
.
See, e.g., id.; Sun Oil Co. v. Govostes,
. This portion of
Bradbury
is actually dicta, as the Court ultimately held that the challеnged evidence was admissible pursuant to the "other purpose" exception to Rule 408.
.
See also Hudspeth v. Commissioner,
.
See Blu-J, Inc. v. Kemper C.P.A. Group,
. In
Lampliter Dinner Theater, Inc. v. Liberty
.Block argues at length that the Eleventh Circuit "does not attempt to narrowly parse particular claims, but instead” focuses on whether the materials at issue were intended to be part of settlement negotiations. (Doc. 239 at 3-5 (citing
Blu-J
v.
Kemper,
. Fed.R.Evid. 408, advisory committee note, 1972 proposed rules ("A more consistently impressive ground [for the common-law rule which Rule 408 supersedes] is promotion of the public policy favoring the compromise and settlement of disputes.”); id. 1974 enactment ("[T]he encouragement of [negotiated settlements] is thе purpose of the rule.”).
.
Westchester Specialty Insurance Services, Inc. v. U.S. Fire Insurance Co.,
. "Rule 408 does not require the exclusion of evidence regarding the settlement of a claim different from the one litigated, [citation omitted], though admission of such evidence may nonetheless implicate the same concerns of prejudice and deterrence of settlements which underlie Rule 408 .... ”
Towerridge, Inc. v. T.A.O., Inc.,
.While some argue that the exclusion of settlement offers is justified because such evidence is irrelevant, "[t]he validity of this position will vary as the amount of the offer varies in relation to the size of the claim and may also be influenced by other circumstances.” The "more consistently impressive ground” favoring the rule is the public policy of encouraging settlements.
. Indeed, the very existence of Rule 408 stands as proof that settlement offers are not perforce irrelevant, else the rule would be superfluous as redundant with Rule 402.
. Nor, contrary to Block’s suggestion, (Doc. 195 at 31-32), did Judge Butler rule that the settlement proposal is legally irrelevant.
. See Armstrong Business Services, Inc. v. H & R Block, 96 S.W.3d 867 (Mo.App.2002).
. As discussed in the Court's order granting in part Block's motion in limine to exclude the testimony of the plaintiffs’ valuation experts, the meaning of “fair and equitable pricе” is ambiguous and thus a question for the jury to resolve.
. According to Block, prior to the October 1999 negotiations in the Missouri litigation the plaintiffs agreed that communications relating to the subject matter of the negotiations would be inadmissible in any judicial proceeding. Block vaguely offers this as a reason to exclude the evidence under Rule 408, (Doc. 239 at 4-5), but the argument might have been more profitably presented as showing the unfairness of allowing the evidence under Rule 403, or as an independent ground of exclusion. At any rate, while Block has complained about the plaintiffs’ conduct, it has not identified any legal authority supporting exclusion of the evidence on this basis. This order does not preclude Block from doing so at a later date.
