After Appellant, Gerardo Lujan, filed suit for employment discrimination and retaliation, Appellee, Aloriea, moved to enforce a forum-selection clause and dismiss the suit based upon its assertion that a forum-selection clause required the suit to be litigated in California. Lujan appeals the trial court’s dismissal of the suit. We reverse.
BACKGROUND
Alorica’s Motions for Enforcement and Dismissal
Aloriea based its motions for enforcement and dismissal on the existence of a forum-selection clause set forth on the second page of a two-page letter dated October 12, 2009, and signed by Alorica’s President, Y.C. Liu, which offers Lujan employment with Aloriea. As a condition of accepting Alorica’s offer of employment, the letter states that Lujan “will be required to truthfully and accurately complete, sign and return the ... Acceptance of Offer Letter.” The letter also provides, “In general, this offer letter when signed by you, sets forth the terms of your employment with the Company and supersede [sic] any and all prior representations and agreements, whether written or oral regarding this subject matter.” The letter then states that the parties consent to sole jurisdiction and venue in California “in any action to declare rights under, arising out of or relating to [the] Agreement, and waive any other jurisdiction and venue to which either party might be entitled by domicile or otherwise.” Thereafter, Liu’s letter instructs, “If the above is agreeable to you, please sign and date below and return to Human Resources[,]” followed by the statement, “I accept this offer of employment^]” and a signature line. The letter bears no signature. All of the foregoing are set forth on the second page of Mr. Liu’s two-page letter. In its motion, Aloriea acknowledged that Lujan did not sign the offer agreement but argues in a footnote that Lujan’s acceptance of employment with the company after receiving the letter constitutes his acceptance of the terms of the letter under Texas and California law.
Lujan’s Response
In his response opposing the motion, Lujan contended, in part, that the forum-selection clause is unenforceable because it is not valid, that he did not agree to the forum-selection clause, that Aloriea bore the burden of establishing that Lujan had agreed to an exclusive forum and that the clause applied to Lujan’s claims, and that Aloriea had failed to satisfy its burden by showing that Lujan, who had not signed the agreement, had agreed to the forum-selection clause. To establish the existence of an enforceable contract, Lujan argued, Aloriea was required to prove the making of an offer, an acceptance of the offer, the parties’ mutual assent or meeting of the minds regarding the subject matter and essential terms of the contract, and the existence of consideration or mutuality of obligations.
See Baylor v. Sonnichsen,
The Hearing
On July 26, 2012, the trial court heard Alorica’s motion to dismiss. There, Alori-ca contended that Liu’s letter was sent or mailed to Lujan. The affidavit of Alori-ca’s President, Y.C. Liu and a copy of the letter was admitted into evidence over Lu-jan’s objection. In the affidavit, Liu attests that he sent a letter to Lujan formally offering him employment with the company, that Lujan accepted employment after Liu sent the letter, and that Lujan never informed anyone that he disagreed with any terms in the offer. Alori-ca argued that Lujan is bound by the terms of the contract under Texas law because he accepted employment with the company, and that a rebuttable presumption exists that Lujan received Liu’s letter. Alorica also noted that Lujan’s response to the motion indicated that Lujan had not accepted the agreement but had made a counter offer, which Alorica contended could not occur absent Lujan’s acceptance of its offer.
On the morning of the hearing, Lujan filed a supplement to his response to Alori-ca’s motion to dismiss. Appended to the supplement is Lujan’s affidavit, in which he avers that: (1) he first saw Liu’s October 12, 2009, two-page letter on the day he signed his affidavit, July 26, 2012; (2) Liu’s two-page letter was never presented to him; (8) he had never seen or received the second page of the letter until July 26, 2012; (4) he did not indicate his disagreement with the terms of the employment offer because he was not aware of the second page of the letter until July 26, 2012; (5) he did not and does not agree to the California forum-selection language; and (6) while employed at Alorica, he was not presented with any document or informed by any person that he was subject to filing suit against Alorica in California or that the suit would be governed by California law.
After Lujan attempted to introduce his affidavit at the hearing, the trial court sustained Alorica’s objection that the affidavit was untimely because it was filed the same- day as the hearing in violation of El Paso County Local Rule 3.11(e) and contradicted Lujan’s admissions set forth in his response to the motion. Lujan’s counsel explained to the trial court that he would have filed Lujan’s affidavit earlier but had been unable to present the affidavit to Lujan for his signature until the morning of the hearing because Lujan had been fired from his employment and had no telephone. The trial court again sustained Alorica’s objection.
In response to the trial court’s inquiry, Lujan’s counsel explained that he would not be calling witnesses to testify because Lujan had no burden of establishing the validity or enforceability of any agreement. Lujan complained that Alorica had failed to meet its burden of proving the existence of a valid and enforceable forum-selection clause, that Liu’s affidavit contained an improper, conclusory statement that he had sent the letter to Lujan on the same day Lujan began working for the company, and that no one had produced any evidence that Lujan had, in fact, received the letter. Thus, Lujan argued, Alorica had failed to meet its first burden.
Lujan also noted that his suit against Alorica was not brought as an at-will employment breach-of-contract action as may fall within the scope of the forum-selection
The trial court granted Alorica’s motion and dismissed Lujan’s case with prejudice in a final judgment.
DISCUSSION
Lujan presents three issues for our review. In Issue One, Lujan contends the trial .court erred and abused its discretion in sustaining Alorica’s objection to his affidavit based on its • same-day filing as no rule requires an affidavit to be filed sooner. In Issue Two, Lujan contends the trial court erred in dismissing his case based on the forum-selection clause because Alorica failed to meet its burden of establishing that Lujan accepted that term or was informed of its existence. In Issue Three, Lujan complains the trial court erred in dismissing his case based on the forum-selection clause because he did not sign the document containing the clause as required for acceptance of the contract under the document’s express terms.
We commence our analysis with Issue Three, in which Lujan complains the trial court erred in dismissing his case because no contract was formed as set forth in Liu’s letter.
Standard of Review
The proper procedural mechanism for enforcing a valid forum-selection clause that a party to the agreement has violated in filing suit is a motion to dismiss.
See Young v. Valt.X Holdings, Inc.,
When our review of the trial court’s dismissal involves contractual interpretation of a forum-selection clause, we review the legal matter
de novo. Stokes Interest, G.P.,
Forum-Selection Clause
The Texas Supreme Court has recognized forum-selection clauses to be, in general, enforceable and presumptively valid.
In re Laibe Corp.,
A party pursuing enforcement of a contractual forum-selection clause bears the initial burden of proving “that the parties entered into an agreement to an exclusive forum and that the agreement applies to the claims involved.”
See Young,
The elements required for the formation of a valid and binding contract include: (1) an offer; (2) acceptance in strict compliance with the terms of the offer; (3) a meeting of the minds; (4) each party’s consent to the term; and (5) execution and delivery of the contract with the intent that it be mutual and binding.
See Baylor,
An offeror is permitted to specify the particular manner in which its offer may be accepted.
See Horton v. Daimler-Chrysler Financial Services Americas, L.L.C.,
An offeree’s use of a different method of acceptance will not be effectual unless the offeror subsequently manifests to the offeree his assent thereto.
Town of Lindsay,
Relevant to our determination of whether a binding contract exists is the presence or absence of signatures on a written contract.
In re Bunzl USA, Inc.,
By its terms, Alorica’s offer no less than thrice requires Lujan’s signature. First, Liu’s letter expressly states, “As a condition of accepting this offer of employment, you will be required to truthfully and accurately complete, sign and return the [application for employment, acceptance of offer letter, and employee inventions and confidentiality agreement (a copy of which is attached) ] ... prior to your first day of commencing work[.]” The letter next provides, “[T]his offer letter, when signed by you, sets forth the terms of your employment with the Company and supersede [sic] any and all prior representations and agreements, whether written or oral regarding this subject matter.” The letter sets forth the forum-selection provisions and specifies that the terms of employment can only be amended in writing, signed by Lujan and an officer of Alorica, and requires that any waiver of a right under the agreement be in writing. Liu’s letter provides, “If the above is agreeable to you, please sign and date below and return to Human Resources.” This is followed by Liu’s signature and an unsigned signature block for Lujan which is preceded by the statement, “I accept this offer of employment.”
Lujan contends that Alorica failed to prove that he accepted or assented to, or was even aware of, the forum-selection term of the employment relationship and, therefore, failed to demonstrate that the parties entered into an agreement containing the forum-selection clause. Lujan also asserts that the evidence before the trial court conclusively shows that he did not accept Alorica’s offer in compliance with its terms, because he did not sign the offer as directed by the terms therein. Alorica responds that Lujan’s acceptance of employment after receiving the agreement constitutes Lujan’s acceptance of the terms of the offer.
Because it sought to enforce the forum-selection clause against Lujan as a non-signatory to the contract in which the clause exists, it was Alorica’s burden to prove in the trial court the theory upon which it relies to bind Lujan to the contract.
See CNOOC Se. Asia Ltd.,
Alorica’s reliance upon these cases is misplaced because Lujan was not an existing employee whose terms of employment were being modified and whose acceptance of the modified terms could be evidenced by his continued employment. Rather,
Under these facts, Alorica failed to meet its burden of proving the theory upon which it relied to bind Lujan, as a non-signatory, to the contract.
See CNOOC Se. Asia Ltd.,
CONCLUSION
The trial court’s judgment is reversed and the case is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings.
RIVERA, J., not participating.
