ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND GRANTING PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT FOR DEFENDANTS
On February 26, 1999, plaintiffs Inamed Corporation, Inamed Development Company, and Bioenterics Corporation filed a complaint against Lubomyr I. Kuzmak, seeking a declaration that certain patents held by Kuzmak were invalid and unenforceable, and that plaintiffs had not infringed the patents. Plaintiffs also alleged that Kuzmak had engaged in patent misuse, and that he had breached certain licensing agreements. The parties engaged in settlement negotiations regarding these and other disputes that culminated in a letter agreement on January 24, 2000. A dispute arose regarding the enforceability of the agreement, however, and claims related to that issue were added to the action in plaintiffs’ First Amended Complaint. Kuzmak has since sold his interest in the patents and the damage claims asserted in his counterclaim against the Inamed companies to Ethicon Endo-Surgery, Inc., which was added as a co-defendani/coun-terclaimant on March 6, 2002.
Plaintiffs have moved for summary judgment on their seventh cause of action, which seeks specific performance of the purported settlement agreement, or alternatively, for partial summary judgment on their eighth cause of action, which seeks damages for its breach. Because the court finds that there are no triable issues of material fact regarding the enforceability of the letter agreement, that it is not enforceable as a matter of law, and that plaintiffs have had notice and an adequate opportunity to bring forward all evidence
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Lubomyr Kuzmak is the inventor or co-inventor of a silicone gastric band used in treating morbid obesity (the ’339 patent) and a gastrostenometer used to measure the exact size of the stoma opening (the ’288 patent). He has also secured two other patents relative to gastric banding— the ’868 patent (for a “reversible” gastric band) and the ’429 patent. The complaint and answer/counterclaim allege that between 1989 and 1993, Kuzmak and Inamed Development Corporation entered into four license agreements concerning the patents-in-suit. Inamed agreed to pay Kuzmak a royalty for the right to exploit the patents. 1 Between 1992 and 1998, it manufactured and sold gastric bands pursuant to the license, and made annual royalty payments to Kuzmak of more than $1.3 million. In 1998, Inamed allegedly attempted to renegotiate the license agreements because it believed that some of the patents were invalid or unenforceable, and felt that the agreements had an improper territorial scope. 2 After negotiations proved unsuccessful, Inamed terminated the agreements, in accordance with their provisions, on December 6, 1998. 3 Kuz-mak sought to arbitrate the issue of royalties allegedly due under the 1993 license, and Inamed filed suit, seeking a declaratory judgment that Kuzmak’s patents were invalid and that it had not infringed the patents.
The present motion does not address the merits of the parties’ underlying disputes but rather the enforceability of a purported settlement of those disputes that was reached in January 2000. As respects the parties’ negotiations and purported agreement, the following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted. Roxana Kuzmak has been married to Lubomyr Kuzmak for more than 35 years. She has served as her husband’s business manager since 1989, 4 and has held power of attorney for his business affairs since 1999. 5 Roxana supervised the work of Kuzmak’s attorneys in this case. 6
From 1989 until 1998, Kuzmak was party to four successive license agreements with Inamed.
7
Kuzmak personally signed each of the agreements.
8
Inamed gave notice of its intention to terminate the last of the agreements, which Kuzmak executed in 1993, on November 6, 1998.
9
Less than two weeks later, Inamed’s lawyer sent Kuzmak’s attorney a proposal for a license to exploit the ’288 and ’429 patents, which included a $200,000 lump sum royalty to be paid over four years and a covenant not to sue on the ’339 and ’868 patents.
10
In February 1999, Kuzmak demanded that Inamed arbitrate the royal
On October 1, 1999, Kuzmak’s lawyer wrote Inamed’s attorney to communicate an “offer of settlement” from his clients. The offer included provisions for (1) payment of past due royalties under the 1993 license agreement and an audit of In-amed’s books to enable Kuzmak to determine the amount of royalties due under that agreement; (2) an acknowledgment that Kuzmak was the sole inventor of the ’429 patent; (3) payment of a nonrefundable lump sum based on estimates of future sales of the lap band and royalties on sales above the estimate; (4) an agreement that Kuzmak would grant In-amed an exclusive license to exploit his gastric band patents; and (5) an agreement that Kuzmak would make available the medical records Inamed required to obtain market approval by the Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) of its lap band device. 14
Inamed responded on October 5, 1999, with what it termed a “final offer of settlement.” It offered to pay (1) $500,000 in settlement of Kuzmak’s claim for past royalties due under the 1993 agreement and any exploitation of the patents prior to the date a new license agreement was signed; and (2) $2,000,000 as an advance against future U.S. royalties, to be paid within sixty days of pre-market approval (“PMA”) by the FDA of Inamed’s lap band device. As respects future payments, it proposed a 3 % royalty on lap band sales, with a guaranteed royalty of $36 per unit. In-amed proposed that the license remain in effect through 2005, when the ’339 patent
On October 13, 1999, Kuzmak made the following “counter-proposal”: (1) that In-amed pay $1,000,000 in consideration of his claim for past due royalties under the 1993 license agreement and any exploitation of the patents prior to execution of a new license agreement; (2) that Inamed pay Kuzmak $36 for every lap band manufactured or sold in the United States or any foreign country where Kuzmak held a patent or had a patent application pending; (3) that Inamed pay Kuzmak a $3,000,000 non-refundable advance against royalties, one-half to be paid upon execution of an agreement and one-half by March 31, 2000; (4) that Inamed recognize Kuzmak as the sole inventor of the ’429 patent; (5) that Kuzmak maintain his Application No. 09/205,195, and that Inamed reissue Patent No. 5,601,604, with narrower claims reflective of a particular embodiment; and (6) that Kuzmak grant Inamed an exclusive license to exploit the ’339, ’288, ’429, ’176, and all related foreign patents, with the license remaining in effect until the last of the patents expired. 16
Inamed’s attorney responded on October 14, 1999. The letter noted that the parties had made progress on certain points, but moved farther apart on others. It stated that, if a resolution could be reached on other outstanding issues, Inamed would address Kuzmak’s demand for an amount in excess of $500,000 on the past due royalties claim. It then offered the following point-by-point response to the Kuzmaks’ proposal: (1) noting that Kuzmak had apparently accepted the $36 royalty figure, Inamed rejected the concept of a royalty based not only on sales, but on units manufactured as well; (2) it similarly rejected Kuzmak’s proposal that it pay a royalty on lap band sales in any foreign country where he had a patent application pending; rather, Inamed stated, it would agree to pay a royalty only in those countries where a patent had been issued to Kuzmak; (3) Inamed also rejected Kuzmak’s counter-proposal regarding the amount and timing of the advance royalty payment, and reiterated its willingness to make a $2,000,000 non-refundable payment within sixty days of FDA approval of the PMA; (4) it indicated that it would recognize Kuzmak as the sole inventor of the ’429 patent; (5) it suggested that the partiеs eliminate issues involving Kuzmak’s Application No. 09/205,195 and Inamed’s Patent No. 5,601,-604 from the scope of the settlement; (6) it asserted that Kuzmak’s obligation to provide the clinical data Inamed needed to prepare submissions to the FDA had no connection with the ongoing disputes, that it required access to the information immediately, and that if the matter could not be resolved, it would be forced to bring the issue to the attention of a court promptly; and (7) it stated that inclusion of the ’288 and ’176 patents in the proposed license agreement was not necessary, and that it did not wish to license the ’429 patent beyond 2005. 17
On October 20, 1999, Kuzmak’s attorney responded. He agreed that settlement of
Inamed’s lawyer chose not to respond point-by-point, stating that his client had already “proposed a global, structured settlement” that it believed “fully compensated Dr. Kuzmak for his past contributions and provide[d] for a generous future income stream in light of the various outstanding issues of validity, ownership, enforceability, claim scope, etc. of the SCT patents.” The attorney noted that Inamed had put “its best offer on the table,” and that the matter was “simply not worth more to Inamed than what it ha[d] already offered.” The letter concluded: “[I]f Dr. Kuzmak can accept an offer along the lines previously outlined, the parties should settle this matter. If not, please advise us accordingly” 19
On October 22, 1999, Kuzmak’s attorney wrote back a short letter, asserting that Inamed had “chosen to avoid answering the most basic question: Under what Kuz-mak patents is [it] willing to pay royalties?” In this regard, he again raised the question of the foreign patents, the ’176 patent, and the ’429 patent.
20
Inamed’s October 25, 1999, response reiterated that it was unwilling to extend the term of the proposed license agreement beyond the expiration date of the ’339 patent. It clarified that it did not believe claim 41 of the ’176 patent and Kuzmak’s foreign patent covered the lap band, and asserted that the ’429 patent, which claimed a surgical method, was of limited commercial value and of questionable validity and enforceability as well. The letter concluded: “As an offer of compromise in light of its positions with respect to Dr. Kuzmak’s entire patent portfolio, Inamed has pro
On October 29, 1999, Kuzmak’s attorney “offerfed] the following settlement proposal” on his client’s behalf: (1) Inamed would pay $1,000,000 in settlement of Kuzmak’s claim for past due royalties under the 1993 license agreement and exploitation of the patents prior to execution of a new license agreement; (2) Inamed would pay a royalty of $36 per lap band sold in the United States; (3) Inamed would pay a royalty of $12 per lap band manufactured in the United States and sold in a foreign country; (4) Inamed would pay a non-refundable advance royalty of $3,000,000 in two equal installments, the first of which would be due on March 31, 2000, and the second on September 30, 2000, or five days after PMA of the lap band by the FDA, whichever was earlier; (5) Kuzmak was to be acknowledged as the sole inventor of the ’429 patent, and to have his contributions recognized in Inamed’s promotional literature; (6) issues related to Kuzmak’s Application No. 09/205,195 and Inamed’s Patent No. 5,601,604 would be left for resolution by the Patent and Trademark Office; and (7) Kuzmak would license the ’339 and ’429 patents to Inamed exclusively until the ’339 patent expired, at which point the parties would negotiate any necessary amendments to the license agreement on the understanding that the per-unit royalty for lap bands sold in the United States would not drop below 1% for the remainder of the life of the ’429 patent. 22
The letter also noted that Inamed had threatened to filed suit if Kuzmak did not make his clinical data immediately available for use in connection with Inamed’s FDA submission, and made the following proposal in that regard:
“Dr. Kuzmak is willing to provide the FDA data as soon as the parties reach an agreement in principle] as long as Inamed is willing to provide a show of its good faith. In the latter regard, in order to provide Inamed virtually immediate access to Dr. Kuzmak’s FDA data without having to wait for final drafting and review of the settlement agreement, Inamed should agree to pay Dr. Kuzmak $400,000 of the $1,000,000 [past due royalty settlement] in exchange for access to the FDA data. This $400,000 is nonrefundable and if no agreement is reached, belongs irrevocably to Dr. Kuz-mak and, for example, is not to be applied, to any award by the AAA in the current arbitration.” 23
Inamed’s lawyer responded on November 1, 1999, stating that his client was not willing to alter the settlement proposal it had made on October 20. Specifically, he stated that Inamed was not willing to pay Kuzmak an advance on royalties prior to FDA market approval of the lap band, and and was not willing to pay royalties on international sales of a product not covered by foreign patents. The letter reiterated Inamed’s demand that Kuzmak immediately make his FDA data available, and noted that Inamed would file suit to obtain the information if required. 24
Kuzmak, through his attorney, offered another “counter-proposal” on November 5, 1999, with the following terms: (1) that Inamed pay him $2,000,000 in settlement
Inamed’s counteroffer, dated November 9, 1999, proposed the following: (1) that Inamed would pay Kuzmak $650,000 in settlement of his claim for unpaid royalties under the 1993 license agreement, exploitation of the patents prior to execution of a new license agreement, and unremunerat-ed contributions to the promotion and FDA approval of the lap band on the following schedule: $400,000 upon the execution of a new agreement that “Inamed will use its best efforts to sign off on before the end of this year,” and $250,000 upon the earlier of December 31, 2000, or PMA of the lap band; (2) that Inamed would pay a $36 royalty on lap bands sold in the United States, and no royalties on bands sold outside the United States; (3) that Inamed would pay an advance royalty of $2,000,000 within sixty days of FDA market approval of the lap band; (4) that issues related to Kuzmak’s Application No. 09/205,195 and Inamed’s Patent No. 5,601,-604 be resolved by the Patent and Trademark Office; (5) that Inamed would not contest Kuzmak’s inventorship of the ’429 patent and “in its discretion” give Kuzmak credit in its literature for his contributions to the field of gastric banding; (5) that Kuzmak would grant Inamed an exclusive license under the ’339 and ’429 patents coextensive with the term of the ’339 patent, and that, upon expiration, the parties would negotiate in good faith a further license of the ’429 patent or any other Kuzmak patent if necessary in light of the state of the art at the time; and (6) Kuz-mak would covenant not to sue Inamed on any patents not included in the license, including the ’288 patent, the ’868 patent, the reissued 176 patent, and any foreign patent corresponding to EP 0 611 561 Bl. 27 As respects access to the FDA data, the letter states:
“Dr. Kuzmak will provide immediate access to the FDA data as soon as the parties reach an agreement in principle (and in no event any later than November 12, 1999). If the parties are unable to reach such an agreement, Inamed will pursue its rights under the Investigator’s Agreements including seeking in-junctive relief to prevent irreparable harm to the PMA process.” 28
The letter stated that Kuzmak would be willing to give Inamed access to the FDA
Kuzmak’s attorney responded on November 11, 1999. He noted Inamed’s desire to obtain a covenant not to sue under certain of Kuzmak’s patents, and its wish to sell lap bands manufactured in the United States in foreign countries without paying a royalty, and observed that these terms required that Kuzmak insist on a more substantial settlement amount and a more reasonable timetable for payment. He thus proposed a non-refundable settlement payment of $1,500,000, $1,000,000 of which would be paid upon execution of the settlement agreement, and $500,000 of which would be paid on or before May 31, 2000. As respects the covenant not to sue, the attorney noted that it would not cover Kuzmak’s pending Application No. 09/205,-195, as to which all rights were reserved. He observed that the parties were generally in agreement regarding the advance royalty payment, but stated that Kuzmak proposed the payment be made within thirty days of FDA approval, as opposed to the sixty contemplated by Inamed. He stated that “Dr. Kuzmak [would] require that Inamed release him from any and all claims of liability and that any filing of a declaratory judgment action or reexamination with respect to any of Dr. Kuzmak’s patents by Inamed (or on behalf of In-amed) [would] result in immediate termination of the agreement.” 30 Regarding the ongoing dispute over the provision of FDA data, the attorney offered “access to the FDA data as soon as an agreement in principle is reached.” 31
Inamed’s November 12, 1999, response stated that it would modify neither the amount nor the timing of the settlement payment set forth in its November 9, 1999, offer. It further asserted that the covenant not to sue had to extend to Kuzmak’s pending patent application, as it could not risk infringement litigation with him while paying millions of dollars in license fees. The November 12 letter once again threatened suit if Kuzmak refused to provide the data necessary to compile the FDA submission, and stated that Inamed would not agree to any extension of the scheduled AAA arbitration dates. 32
On January 13, 2000, Kuzmak’s attorney made “one final attempt to settle [the] matter.” He stated that “Dr. Kuzmak [was] willing to accept all of Inamed’s terms” set forth in the November 9, 1999, letter with “two fairly minor exceptions”i.e., the amount and timing of the initial payment, and the timing and terms of the non-refundable advance royalty payment. As respects the settlement payment for past due royalties, exploitation of the patents priоr to execution of a license agreement and unremunerated past contributions to promotion of the lap band, Kuz-mak proposed a lump sum payment of $850,000 upon execution of a settlement agreement. Regarding the advance royalty payment, he proposed that it be due “immediately” upon Inamed’s receipt of PMA from the FDA, defined as a specific number of days necessary for transfer purposes. He further stated that the advance royalty would have to be guaranteed, through escrow, letter of credit or similar device, such that Inamed would not be able to contest or delay its payment. The letter concluded: “It is important that In-amed understand that this is truly a ‘final’ offer by the Kuzmaks.... The Kuzmaks are now at a point where they feel that if Inamed is not willing to settle on what are
Inamed’s attorney wrote back on January 18, 2000, stating that Inamed would not alter the amount of the initial settlement payment, but would accelerate payment of the advance royalty payment to a date thirty days following PMA. 34 A January 19, 2000, letter from Inamed’s counsel confirmed “the details of the terms of the offer upon which the Inamed respondents will settle [the] matter.” 35 It stated that the advance royalty payment would be made no later than thirty days following PMA, and that it would be “non-refundable, irrevocable and uncontestable.” It further confirmed that Inamed would “agree to include language in the settlement agreement to this effect to guarantee payment.” Regarding the $650,000 settlement amount, the letter proposed that it be paid in two installations — $400,000 upon execution of a settlement agreement, “which the parties will use their best efforts to sign off on as soon as possible,” and $250,000 “within 90 days of execution of a settlement agreement.” With these modifications, the letter stated, “all of the other terms of the settlement [would] be as set forth in our letter of November 9, 1999.” 36
A January 21, 2000 letter from Inamed’s counsel referenced a telephone conference between counsel, and confirmed that In-amed would obtain a letter of credit to guarаntee the advance royalty payment. It requested that Kuzmak’s counsel “let us know as soon as possible whether th[e] offer [was] acceptable to Dr. Kuzmak.” 37
On January 24, 2000, Inamed’s lawyer sent Kuzmak’s attorney a letter “confirming] and outline[ing] the terms of the settlement agreement reached between the parties ... in” the AAA arbitration, this action, and a New Jersey state court action that concerned Kuzmak’s refusal to deliver the clinical data Inamed needed to prepare its FDA submission. 38 The letter recites the following substantive settlement terms:
• “In complete consideration of the settlement agreement including all of Kuz-mak’s claims against Inamed such as any past royalties allegedly owed under the 1998 License Agreement, any damages alleged from the date of termination until a new license is signed, and any alleged ‘unrenumerated contributions,’ In-amed will pay Kuzmak $650,000, to be paid as follows: $400,000 immediately upon execution of a settlement agreement, which the parties will use their best efforts to sign off on as soon as possible; and $250,000 within 90 days of execution of the settlement agreement.” 39
• “Inamed will pay a royalty of $36 (US) for every band that it sells in the U.S.” 40
• “No royalties will be paid for bands sold outside of U.S.” 41
• “Inamed will pay Kuzmak an advance against royalties based on sales ... of $2,000,000 within 30 days of PMA, with the per unit royalty to begin after the
• “Kuzmak and Inamed will leave resolution of any interference that may be declared between U.S. Application Serial No. 09/205,195 (the “One-Size-Fits-All invention”) and U.S. Patent No. 5,601,-604 to be decided in a USPTO interference proceeding, if one is declared.” 43
• “Inamed will not contest Kuzmak’s in-ventorship of the ’429 patent and in its discretion will give credit to Kuzmak for his contributions in the field of gastric banding in its literature.” 44
• “Kuzmak will grant Inamed an exclusive license under the ’339 and ’429 patents coextensive with the term of the ’339 patent. Thereafter, Kuzmak and In-amed agree to negotiate in good faith any license to the ’429 patent or any other Kuzmak patents which may be applicable at that time if necessary in light of the future state of the art.” 45
• “Kuzmak will covenant not to sue In-amed on any of his other patents and patent applications, pending or future, not included in the license ..., including the ’288 patent, the ’868 patent, and any patent or application corresponding to the One-Size-Fits-All invention, including the reissued ’176 patent and any foreign patent corresponding to EP 0 611 561 Bl.” 46
The letter concluded with the statement: “If the terms outlined above reflect your understanding of the agreement reached between Kuzmak and Inamed, please indicate your acceptance by signing below and returning a copy to us.” 47 Kuzmak’s lawyer signed below the legend “Agreed and Accepted” on the last page of the document, and returned a copy to Inamed’s lawyer. 48 Neither of the Kuzmaks signed the January 24, 2000, letter. 49
Inamed’s 1989, 1990 and 1991 license agreements with Kuzmak contained representations and warranties by both parties, as well as provisions regarding the assignment and transfer of Inamed’s rights to the licensed patents; third party infringement; the grounds for and effect of a termination of the licenses; Kuzmak’s right to audit and inspect Inamed’s records; procedures for dispute resolution; indemnification of Kuzmak in connection with suits filed, costs incurred and losses sustained as a result of Inamed’s use of his patents; and Inamed’s obligation to use its best efforts to make, promote, and sell devices embodying the licensed patents. The 1993 license agreement incorporated these provisions from the earlier agreements. The January 24, 2000 letter, by contrast, did not include any such terms. 50
The parties did not discuss assignability, third party infringement, representations and warranties, license termination, dispute resolution, indemnification, inspection or audit rights, Inamed’s obligations to use best efforts, suspension of royalties, main-
On January 27, 2000, the parties sent a letter to the American Arbitration Association, stating that they “ha[d] reached two separate agreements in principle that they believe[d would] resolve all outstanding issues in th[e] arbitration.” 52 The letter “requested] an adjournment of the hearing dates and all related filing obligations,” and asked “that the AAA place th[e] matter on a suspended docket until such time as the parties ha[d] an opportunity to reduce their settlement agreements to writing and to complete all major obligations under such settlement agreements.” 53
On February 16, 2000, Inamed’s attorney sent Kuzmak’s lawyer a “proposed draft of the Settlement Agreement” mentioned in the January 24, 2000 letter. 54 The draft contained a signature block for Dr. Kuzmak. 55 Approximately a month later, on March 22, 2000, Inamed’s attorney sent Kuzmak’s lawyer another letter regarding the proposed agreement. 56 The letter, which followed a telephone conversation between counsel, noted that “In-amed remain[ed] willing to enter into a more formal agreement which reflected] the terms of the settlement agreement already recorded by our letter of January 24, 2000.” It also confirmed that “[t]he only issue that [Kuzmak’s lawyer had] mentioned during [the telephone] conversation was the inclusion of the ’429 patent in the covenant not to sue following expiration of the license,” and noted that, “[i]f this is the only issue of concern to Dr. Kuzmak, ... Inamed [would] not object to redrafting the corresponding section of the agreement to be consistent with our letter of January 24, 2000.”
On March 29, 2000, Kuzmak’s attorney responded. Noting that he “ha[d] been asked [in recent communication with plaintiffs’ counsel] to provide ... some feedback regarding the portions of the proposed Agreement that are most at odds with the terms of the agreement in principle that was signed on January 24, 2000,”
57
the lawyer detailed purported in
Inamed did not respond in writing to the March 29, 2000, letter. 59 Rather, on April 5, 2000, it filed suit against Kuzmak in district court in New Jersey. 60
The FDA granted Inamed’s PMA application for the lap band effective June 5, 2001.
61
On June 25, 2001, Inamed’s lawyer wrote Kuzmak’s attorney, reaffirming that “Inamed ... remain[ed] ready, willing and able to make the payments specified in paragraph (a) of the January 24, 2001, agreement, i.e., $400,000 upon execution and $250,000 within ninety (90) days of execution of the detailed agreement.”
62
In February 2002, Inamed wrote Ethicon, which had by that time purchased Kuz-mak’s patents.
63
It stated: “Inamed has always been and continues to be, ready, willing and able to forward the amounts called for under the Settlement agreement and to comply with its other obligations ....”
64
Inamed has never tendered the letter of credit guaranteeing the
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard Governing Motions For Summary Judgment
A motion for summary judgment must be granted when “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.PROC. 56(c). A party seeking summary judgment bears the initial burden of informing the court of the basis for its motion and of identifying those portions of the pleadings and discovery responses that demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact. See
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
In judging evidence at the summary judgment stage, the court does not make credibility determinations or weigh conflicting evidence. Rather, it draws all inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. See
T.W. Electric Service, Inc. v. Pacific Electrical Contractors Ass’n,
Plaintiffs assert that the January 24, 2000 letter agreement contains all the terms essential to a complete resolution of the parties’ dispute, and that the parties intended that it be binding upon execution. Whether a contract is sufficiently definite and certain in its essential terms to be enforceable is a question of law for the court. See
Robinson & Wilson, Inc. v. Stone,
B. The Enforceability Of The January 24, 2000, Letter Agreement
1. The Authority Of Kuzmak’s Attorney To Enter Into The Letter Agreement
Defendants contend that the January 24, 2000, letter agreement is not an enforceable settlement agreement because
The initial question that must be answеred regarding defendants’ lack of authority argument is whether it was sufficiently preserved during the course of the litigation to provide a basis for entering summary judgment in their favor. Plaintiffs contend that Hunt’s authority to enter into the January 24, 2000, letter agreement was never raised as an issue in the ease prior to February 27, 2000 — the day defendants’ opposition to the summary judgment motion was filed. On that day, plaintiffs contend, Hunt waived the attorney-client privilege and testified to the matter during his deposition. No such defense was pleaded in Kuzmak’s answer/counterclaim, and, prior to February 27, 2002, defendants’ answers to interrogatories regarding the bases for their belief that the agreement was unenforceable did not identify Hunt’s lack of authority as an issue. 69 Indeed, even on February 26, 2002, the day Hunt before testified, defendants served supplemental interrogatory answers that failed to mention Hunt’s lack of authority as one of the facts upon which they based their contention that the agreement was invalid or unenforceable. 70
Given the belated manner in which the issue was raised, plaintiffs assert that defendants should be barred from arguing that the agreement is unenforceable because Hunt lacked authority to enter into it on Kuzmak’s behalf. Rule 37(c)(1) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, as amended in 1993, provides, in part:
“(1) A party that without substantial justification fails to disclose information required by Rule 26(a) or 26(e)(1), or to amend a prior response to discovery as required by Rule 26(e)(2), is not, unless such failure is harmless, permitted to use as evidence at a trial, at a hearing, or on a motion any witness or information not so disclosed.” Fed.R.Civ.Proc. 37(c)(1).
Inamed apparently contends that defendants failed seasonably to amend their pri- or contention interrogatory responses to reflect the fact that they intended to rely on Hunt’s lack of authority, and thus that Inamed learned of the defense only during Hunt’s deposition on the day defendants’ opposition to this motion was filed. See Fed.R.Cxv.PROC. 26(e)(2) (“A party is under a duty seasonably to amend a prior re
Rule 37(c)(1) provides that a preclusion sanction shall be imposed unless the party failing to disclose the information acted with substantial justification or the failure to disclose was harmless. Here, defendants offer no justification for their belated disclosure of the lack of authority defense, and it is difficult to conceive how they could. There is no suggestion that the Kuzmaks only recently realized that Hunt acted without authority, nor, given the nature of the defense, could there be. This is the type of a defense that must have been known to the Kuzmaks from the moment Inamed asserted that the January 24, 2000, agreement gave rise to enforceable rights. Yet only in the last several months have they seen fit to assert it in this proceeding.
Similarly, there can have been no misapprehension that defendants’ prior interrogatory answers were incomplete, as they did not apprise Inamed that Kuzmak contended Hunt lacked authority to enter into the January 24, 2000, letter agreement on his behalf. Defendants knew that Inamed was unaware they intended to rely on this defense in opposing summary judgment or defending at trial. Yet they took no steps to advise Inamed of the defense or to supplement their earlier interrogatory answers. Learning of the defense only after it had filed its motion for summary judgment placed Inamed at a distinct disadvantage and constituted unfair surprise. It was required to digest Hunt’s deposition hurriedly and to respond to the argument only in reply. Thus, there is no substantial justification and an affirmative showing of prejudice. Together, they warrant imposing the preclusion sanction contemplated by Rule 37(e)(1). See
Pfingston v. Ronan Engineering Co.,
Even were this not the case, the lack of authority argument would fail. While employment alone does not give an attorney authority to settle on his or her client’s behalf (see
Blanton v. Womancare, Inc.,
“A principal is liable ‘when the principal knows the agent holds himself or herself out as clothed with certain authority and remains silent.’ ”
NORCAL Mutual Ins. Co. v. Newton,
Defendants argue that following the California Supreme Court’s decision in
Levy v. Superior Court,
Defendants rely on dicta in
Murphy,
which “questions] whether agency theory can ever be applied in the context of settlement agreements [in] pending litigation in light of the
Levy
and
Johnson
decisions.”
Murphy, supra,
2. Does The January 24, 2000 Letter Agreement Contain All The Essential Terms Of A Contract?
“To be enforceable, a promise must be definite enough that a court can determine the scope of the duty and the limits of performance must be sufficiently defined to provide a rational basis for the assessment of damages.”
Ladas, supra,
If an essential element of the promise is reserved for future agreement, there is no binding contract until the open point is resolved. See
Weddington Productions, Inc. v. Flick,
Defendants contend the letter agreement lacks several essential terms, and thus that it cannot be enforced as a binding contract. 74 Most fundamentally, they assert, the document contains no release language, despite the fact that the parties were engaged in three separate litigation matters that raised a myriad of claims. Additionally, they argue, the letter did not address such matters as license termination, indemnification, sublicenses, transfer of rights, confidentiality, and dispute resolution.
Plaintiffs counter that all terms necessary to form a valid patent license were included in the January 24, 2000, letter. They argue that the letter identifies the licensor and licensee, the subject of the license, its scope and duration, and the royalty payments to be made.
75
See
Core-Vent Corp. v. Implant Innovations, Inc.,
Defendants assert that
Core-Vent
is not controlling, and that under California law, terms regarding termination, indemnification, and dispute resolution are material to a license agreement. In support, they cite
Weddington Productions, supra,
In
Weddington Productions,
the parties agreed to “formalize a Licensing Agreement” with a “fully paid up license” to Flick. Neither term was defined.
Id.
at 799,
Core-Vent
and
Weddington Productions
are not in conflict. Rather, they represent the application of two well-settled principles of contract formation. Where parties agree to the material terms of a contract, they cannot avoid the formation of a valid and binding agreement by silently reserving an issue, and later claiming that it was material to their willingness to enter into a contract. See
Core-Vent, supra,
Applying these principles to the instant case, the court loоks first to the negotiations that preceded execution of the January 24, 2000, agreement to ascertain the key terms under discussion. Cf.
Frankel v. Board of Dental Examiners,
The next item raised by defendants is the lack of any release language in the January 24, 2000, letter agreement. In contrast to matters such as license termination, indemnification, and dispute resolution, Kuzmak’s attorney specifically raised the question of a release by Inamed in a November 9,1999, letter to Inamed’s counsel. To understand fully the import of Hunt’s November 9 letter, it is necessary to review the history of the parties’ negotiations with respect to the scope of the license to be granted by Kuzmak, and Inamed’s corresponding requests for a a covenant not to sue. Inamed’s first proposal following termination of the parties’ license agreements in November 1998 suggested that Kuzmak license it to exploit the ’288 and ’429 patents, and covenant not to sue it for infringement of the ’339 and ’868 patents. 77 Following the commencement of litigation, Kuzmak’s first settlement proposal contemplated that he would license Inamed to exploit all of his gastric banding patents. On October 14, 1999, Inamed made clear that it had no interest in licensing the ’288 and ’176 patents, and that it did not wish to license the ’429 patent beyond 2005. 78 Kuzmak took issue with this, 79 and further communications on the subject ensued. 80 Ultimately, Kuzmak agreed that the license would extend only to the ’339 and ’429 patents. 81 At this point — specifically in a letter datеd November 9, 1999 — Inamed’s lawyer once again advised that his client would require a covenant not to sue on the patents excluded from the scope of the licensing agreement. 82
Kuzmak’s attorney responded on November 11, 1999. Noting Inamed’s desire to obtain a covenant not to sue, he stated that “Dr. Kuzmak [would] require that Inamed release him from any and all claims of liability and that any filing of a declaratory judgment action or reexamination with respect to any of Dr. Kuzmak’s patents by Inamed (or on behalf of In-
The January 24, 2000, letter agreement states that Kuzmak covenants not to sue Inamed on any of his patents and patent applications, pending and future, not included in the license agreement. It contains no release of Kuzmak from claims previously asserted by Inamed, nor any provision stating that Inamed’s filing of a declaratory judgment suit or a request for reexamination with the Patent and Trademark Office would result in immediate termination of the license. 85 Finally, it contains no stipulation that the pending litigation proceedings would be dismissed.
Inamed contends that the January 24, 2000, letter is the equivalent of a release of Kuzmak, because Inamed could not initiate a suit against Kuzmak seeking a declaration that his patents are invalid because he has covenant not to sue Inamed.
86
In
Amana Refrigeration, Inc., v. Quadlux, Inc.,
The result is less clear with respect to Inamed’s claim of patent misuse. Inamed asserts that patent misuse is, in effect, a “defense” that could have not been pursued during the life of the covenant not to sue.
87
It is true, as plaintiffs contend, that patent misuse developed as an equitable defense to an infringement action. See 6 Donald S. Chisum, Chisum on Patents, § 19.04[4] at pp. 19-534-35 (2001). It is a defense that may be raised by way of an action for declaratory relief. See
B. Braun Medical, Inc. v. Abbott Laboratories,
Here, the precise nature of Inamed’s patent misuse claim is difficult to discern. Inamed does not seek merely a declaration that Kuzmak has been guilty of patent misuse. Rather, it seeks to enjoin him permanently from claiming that it has infringed the gastric band patents. This is inconsistent with its assertion as a defense, since a patent misuse defense allows the patent owner to sue for infringement once the misuse has been purged. See
Braun, supra,
Additionally, the complaint contains a cause of action that seeks disgorgement of all royalties paid under the 1993 License Agreement, on the basis that Kuzmak breached the representation and warranty in the agreement that he owned the exclusive right to exploit the patents-in-suit. The rationale of
Amana Refrigeration, supra,
which concerns the fact that a party that is the recipient of a covenant not to sue has no reasonable apprehension that it will be charged with infringement, does not apply to a claim such as this. See
Amana Refrigeration, supra,
There is no doubt that release provisions are generally thought to be material terms of any settlement agreement. See, e.g.,
Kohn v. Jaymar-Ruby, Inc.,
Additionally, the agreement contains no language regarding dismissal of the pending lawsuits. Inamed argues this was “implied,” as the Re: line identifies each of the actions, and the letter confirms the “settlement agreement reached ... in the above-referenced actions.” 88 While this may be true, an important and material detail is missing — whether the dismissal was to be with prejudice or without. This issue is, of course, linked directly to the nature of the release contemplated by the parties, as a dismissal with prejudice would have precluded Inamed and Kuzmak from refiling their respective claims, while a dismissal without prejudice would have permitted reassertion of the claims at some point in the future.
Inamed asserts that “[t]he negotiations between the parties make clear that a dismissal with prejudice of all claims was intended except with respect to claims regarding the ’429 patent, which would be dismissed without prejudice.” 89 Having reviewed the parties’ correspondence, the court is unclear how this intent can be gleaned from the exchange of letters. In-amed may mean to suggest that the parties’ agreement to negotiate an extension of the license for the ’429 patent in 2005 “in light of the future state of the art” implies that it was free, at that time, to challenge the validity of the patent. It appears, however, that it was also free to challenge the validity of the ’288 patent, the ’868 patent, the One-Size-Fits-All patent, assuming it had issued, the reissued ’176 patent, and any foreign patent as well, since the covenant not to sue on these patents was to expire with the license agreement in 2005. Indeed, this is precisely what Inamed argues at a later pоint in its brief. 90 Moreover, the statement of Kuzmak’s attorney in his November 11, 1999, letter that “any filing of a declaratory judgment action or reexamination with respect to any of Dr. Kuzmak’s patents by Inamed (or on behalf of Inamed) will result in immediate termination of the agreement” suggests that he, too, may have understood that any dismissal of the invalidity and unenforeeability claims would be without prejudice. In short, here too, a term essential to the enforcement of a contract purporting to settle three pieces of litigation is absent from the January 24, 2000, letter agreement. 91
The draft contained no release of Kuz-mak, except to the extent that the covenant not to sue granted by Kuzmak had the effect of preventing suit against him for a period of time on the patents within its scope. 92 Contrary to the terms of the January 24, 2000, letter agreement, the covenant not to sue was expanded to in-elude the ’429 patent following expiration of the license in 2005. Contrary to the understanding of Kuzmak’s attorney and the substance of some of the parties’ pre-January 24, 2000 correspondence, the covenant not to sue continued beyond the expiration of Inamed’s license of the ’389 patent in 2005. Dismissal of the three lawsuits was contemplated, although the record before the court does not reflect whether the dismissal was to be with prejudice or without.
Kuzmak’s lawyer reacted to the proposed draft on March 29, 2000, noting, inter alia, that the covenant not to sue was “сlearly” not intended to extend beyond termination of the license agreement, and that, because there was a possibility of future litigation between the parties, his client could not agree to the sweeping release language Inamed had proposed. 93
An agreement must be sufficiently definite that a court can determine the parties’ respective duties and whether they have been breached. Here, while the license agreement portion of the parties’ contract
Because the parties failed to agree upon material terms regarding the dismissal of pending litigation and the scope of the releases to be given, the January 24, 2000, letter agreement is not enforceable, and plaintiffs cannot prevail on their seventh and eighth causes of action. 95
C. Even If The Letter Agreement Were Enforceable, Inamed Cannot Prove An Essential Element Of Its Claims For Specific Performance And Breach Of Contract
Inamed’s motion seeks summary judgment on its breach of contract and specific performance claims. Assuming
arguendo
that the January 24 2000, letter agreement is an enforceable contract, proving that Kuzmak breached his obligations under the agreement is an essential element of Inamed’s claims. See
Spear v. California State Automobile Ass’n.,
Breach can be either actual or anticipatory. An anticipatory breach occurs when a party expressly and unequivocally refuses to perform, or when its conduct places the party in a position where it cannot substantially perform.
Taylor v. Johnston,
When a promisor repudiates a contract, the promisee “may treat the repudiation as an anticipatory breach and immediately seek damages for breach of contract, thereby terminating the contractual relation between the parties, or he ... can treat the repudiation as an empty threat, wait until the time for performance arrives and exercise his ... remedies for actual breach if a breach does in fact occur at such time.”
Romano v. Rockwell International, Inc.,
At the hearing on this motion, Inamed identified Kuzmak’s March 29, 2000, letter, as the repudiation or breach giving rise to its causes of action.
96
As requested by Inamed, Kuzmak’s lawyer outlined in this
Kuzmak’s lawyer suggested that, “[g]iv-en the problems, including future uncertainties inherent in the agreement in principle and problems of trust regarding payment of royalties, some thought ... be given to an agreement structure wherein, for a large, up front, lump sum payment, Dr. Kuzmak would assign all his rights in the Kuzmak patents to Inamed.” 101
The party asserting repudiation bears “a heavy burden, for anticipatory breach must appear only with the clearest terms of repudiation of the obligation of the contract....”
Martinez, supra,
Inamed has also presented no evidence that Kuzmak refused to perform a duty under the purported contract, or that he engaged in conduct that made it impossible for him to perform his obligations under the January 24, 2000, letter agreement. See
Taylor, supra,
D. Whether Summary Judgment Is Properly Entered In Defendants’ Favor
The district court may
sua sponte
grant a summary judgment to the nonmov-ing party where it determines that “there is no genuine dispute respecting a material fact essential to the proof of movant’s case....”
O’Keefe v. Van Boening,
“[A] litigant must be given reasonable notice that the sufficiency of his or her claim will be in issue...however, before summary judgment can properly be entered.
O’Keefe, supra,
Here, the parties’ correspondence preceding, and the terms of, the January 24, 2000, letter agreement are not in dispute. Whether the essential terms of the agreement are sufficiently definite and certain that the contract is enforceable is a question of law for the court to decide. It is clear, moreover, that plaintiffs have had adequate time to develop the facts pertinent to the motion. The parties have taken extensive discovery, and the matter has been exhaustively briefed. In their opposition memorandum, defendants requested that the court enter summary judgment in their favor because the issue was one of law. For all these reasons, the court concludes that Inamed was on notice of the possibility that this motion might result in the entry of summary judgment in defendants’ favor. Sua sponte entry of judgment in defendants’ favor on the seventh and eighth causes of action in plaintiffs’ complaint is thus appropriate.
For the above reasons, the court denies plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment and enters partial summary judgment sua sponte in defendants’ favor on the seventh and eighth causes of action in plaintiffs’ complaint.
Notes
. Supplemental and Amended Complaint (''Supp.Complaint'') at ¶¶ 10-13; Ex. 1 (the "License Agreement”).
. Supp. Complaint, ¶ 42.
. Id., ¶ 43.
. Defendants’ Additional Uncontroverted Facts ("Defs.’ Add. Facts”), ¶ 1; Plaintiffs’ Opposition to Separate Statement of Additional Uncontroverted Facts ("Pis.' Opp. Facts”), ¶1.
. Defs.’ Add. Facts, ¶ 2; Pis.’ Opp. Facts, ¶ 2.
. Id.
. Defs.' Add. Facts, ¶ 3; Pis.’ Opp. Facts, ¶ 3.
. Defs.’ Add. Facts, ¶ 5; Pis.’ Opp. Facts, ¶ 5.
. Defs.’ Add. Facts, ¶ 6; Pis.’ Opp. Facts, ¶ 6.
. Defs.’ Add. Facts, ¶ 7; Pis.' Opp. Facts, ¶ 7.
.Plaintiffs’ Separate Statement of Uncontro-verted Facts and Conclusions of Law (“Pis.’ Facts"), ¶ 1; Ethicon’s and Kuzmak’s Statement of Genuine Issues (“Defs.' Issues”), ¶ 1. (Plaintiffs have submitted separate but identical statements of undisputed facts in support of summary judgment on their seventh and eighth claims, with the exception of Fact No. 22, which is offered in support of summary judgment on the seventh, but not the eighth, claim for relief. For simplicity, the court will cite the facts offered in support of the seventh cause of action.) Plaintiffs dispute defendants’ proffered fact regarding the amount of royalties Inamed allegedly owed Kuzmak as an improper legal conclusion and irrelevant. (Defs.’ Add. Facts, ¶ 8; Pis.' Opp. Facts, ¶ 8.) Rule 401 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure defines relevant evidence as proof “having any 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. In the context of this motion, which concerns the enforceability of the January 24, 2000 letter agreement, Kuzmak’s contention that royalties were due under the 1993 license agreement, the amount of the royalties that allegedly remained unpaid, and Kuzmak's initiation of an AAA arbitration to secure their payment are relevant in assessing the materiality of various terms that were and were not included in the January 24, 2000 letter agreement. The court interprets defendants’ proffered Fact No. 8 as a statement of Kuzmak’s contentions in this regard, not as a statement that his contentions were correct. Thus, plaintiffs' objections are overruled.
. Pis.' Facts, ¶ 2; Defs.’ Issues, ¶ 2; Defs.’ Add. Facts, ¶ 9; Pis.’ Opp. Facts, ¶ 9. Ethicon was added as a defendant and counterclaim-ant pursuant to the court's order on March 6, 2002.
. Pis.’ Facts, ¶ 3; Defs.' Issues, ¶ 3.
. Declaration of Stewart M. Brown (“Brown Decl.”), Ex. 5.
. Id., Ex. 6.
.Id., Ex. 7.
.Id., Ex. 8.
. Id., Ex. 9.
. Id., Ex. 10.
. Id., Ex. 11.
. Id., Ex. 12.
. Id., Ex. 13.
. Id. at 85.
. Id. Ex. 14.
. Id., Ex. 15.
. Id. at 91-92.
. Id., Ex. 15.
. Id. at 94.
. Id., Ex. 16.
. Id., Ex. 17.
. Id. at 99.
. Id., Ex. 18.
. Id., Ex. 19.
. Id., Ex. 20.
. Id., Ex. 21.
. Id.
. Id.. Ex. 22.
. Pis.' Facts, ¶4; Defs.' Facts, ¶4; Pis.' Opp. Facts, ¶ 5; Defs.’ Issues, V 5; Brown Dеcl., Ex. 23.
. Pis.' Facts, ¶ 6; Defs.' Issues, ¶ 6; Defs.’ Add. Facts, Í 29; Pis.' Add. Facts, ¶ 29.
. Pis.’ Facts, ¶ 7; Defs.' Issues, ¶ 7.
. Pis.’ Facts. ¶ 8; Defs.’ Issues. ¶ 8.
. Pis.’ Facts, ¶ 9; Defs.’ Issues, ¶ 9; Defs.' Add. Facts, ¶ 12; Pis.’ Opp. Facts, ¶ 12; Defs.’ Add. Facts, ¶ 37; Pis.' Add. Facts, ¶ 37.
. Pis.' Facts, ¶ 10; Defs.' Issues, ¶ 10.
. Pis.’ Facts, ¶ 11; Defs.' Issues, ¶ 11.
. Pis.’ Facts, ¶ 12; Defs.' Issues, ¶ 12.
. Pis.' Facts, ¶ 13; Defs.’ Issues, ¶ 13.
. Pis.' Facts, ¶ 14; Defs.’ Issues, ¶ 14.
. Pis.’ Facts, ¶ 15; Defs.’ Issues, ¶ 15; Brown Decl., Ex. 23 at 114.
. Defs.’ Add. Facts, ¶ 26; Pis.' Opp. Facts, ¶ 26.
. Defs.’ Add. Facts, ¶ 4; Pis.’ Opp. Facts, ¶ 4.
. Dels.' Add. Facts, ¶¶ 13-24; Pis.’ Opp. Facts, ¶¶ 13-24.
. Dels.' Add. Facts, ¶ 30; Pis.’ Opp. Facts, ¶ 30. Plaintiffs state that it is “[ujndisputed that the letter was sent. The document speaks for itself.” The court has referred only to the existence of the document and therefore does not reach the objection to paragraph 14 of the Hunt declaration.
. Hunt Deck, Exhibit 20.
. Pis.’ Facts, ¶ 16; Defs.' Issues, ¶ 16; Defs.’ Add. Facts, ¶ 31; Pis.' Opp. Facts, ¶ 31. Plaintiffs object to paragraph 17 of the Hunt declaration, which asserts that the February 16, 2000, draft is inconsistent with January 24, 2000, letter agreement, on the basis that it offers a legal conclusion and constitutes improper opinion testimony. As the court has relied only on the document itself, and as plaintiffs dispute neither the transmission nor the contents of the letter, (see Pis.’ Opp. Facts, ¶ 31 (it is "[u]ndisputed that the document was sent. The document speaks for itself”)), the court need not reach plaintiffs’ objection.
. Defs.' Add. Facts, ¶32; Defs.’ Opp. Facts, ¶ 32.
. Pis.’ Facts, ¶ 17; Defs.’ Issues, ¶ 17. Defendants state it is “undisputed that a letter was sent; the document speaks for itself.” (Defs.’ Issues, ¶ 17.) As they have not objected to either the exhibit or paragraph 19 of the Bamberger declaration, which authenticates it, the court deems the fact undisputed.
. Pis.’ Facts, ¶. 18; Defs.’ Issues, ¶ 18. Defendants have objected to paragraph 20 of the Bamberger declaration, which summarizes and characterizes Hunt's March 29, 2000, letter, on the basis that it “mischaracterizes the evidence.” As the court has relied only on the document itself, and as defendants
. Bamberger Decl., Ex. 6; Defs.' Add. Facts, ¶ 33; Pis.' Opp. Facts, ¶ 33.
. Defs.’ Add. Facts, ¶ 35; Pis.’ Opp. Facts, ¶ 35.
. Defs.’ Add. Facts, ¶ 36; Pis.’ Opp. Facts, ¶ 36.
. Pis.' Facts, ¶ 19; Defs.' Issues, ¶ 19; Defs.’ Add. Facts, ¶ 39; Pis.' Opp. Facts, ¶ 39.
. Pis.’ Facts, ¶ 20; Defs.’ Issues, ¶ 20. While defendants object to paragraph 22 of the Bamberger declaration as hearsay, they do not dispute plaintiffs' proffered Fact No. 20, acknowledging that it is "undisputed that a letter was sent; the document speaks for itself.” The court interprets defendants' Statement of Genuine Issues as an admission that Exhibit 8 to the Bamberger declaration is authentic and admissible, and thus deems plaintiffs' proffered Fact No. 20 undisputed for purposes of this motion. The court has not considered the paraphrase of Exhibit 8 set forth in paragraph 22 of the Bamberger declaration in ruling on the motion.
. Pis.' Facts, ¶ 21; Defs.’ Issues, ¶ 21. While defendants object to paragraph 23 of the Bamberger declaration as hearsay, they do not dispute plaintiffs' proffered Fact No. 21, acknowledging that it is "undisputed that a letter was sent; the document speaks for itself.” The court interprets defendants’ Statement of Genuine Issues as an admission that Exhibit 9 to the Bamberger declaration is authentic and admissible, and thus deems plaintiffs' proffered Fact No. 21 undisputed for purposes of this motion. The court has not considered the paraphrase of Exhibit 9 set forth in paragraph 23 of the Bamberger declaration in ruling on the motion.
. Bamberger Deck, Ex. 10.
. Defs.' Add. Facts, ¶¶ 38, 39; Pis.' Opp. Facts, ¶¶ 38, 39.
. Hunt Deck, ¶ 15. Plaintiffs object to these statements as improper legal conclusion and opinion testimony. As the agent of his clients, however, Hunt is competent to testify to the scope of express authority he was given. Accordingly, the objection is overruled.
. Declaration of Roxana Kuzmak ("Kuzmak DecL”), ¶ 7. Plaintiffs object to this statement as improper legal conclusion and opinion testimony. As Hunt’s client, Kuzmak is competent to testify to the scope of the authority she gave him. Accordingly, the objection is overruled.
. Hunt Deck, ¶ 16.
. See, e.g., Declaration of Richard T. Mulloy ("Mulloy Decl.”), Ex. 1.
. Declaration of Stewart Brown in Support of Plaintiffs' Reply ("Brown Reply Decl.”), Ex. 1.
. See Declaration of Stewart Brown Introducing New Documents In Support of In-amed’s Motion for Summary Judgment Pursuant to the Parties’ Stipulation (“Brown Supp. DecL”), Exs. 1-6.
. Id.
. See Defs.' Opp. at 10:14-11:14.
. Dr. Kuzmak’s Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of His Opposition to Plaintiffs’ Motion for Summary Judgment ("Deis.' Opp.") at 12-17.
. Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Plaintiffs’ Motion for Summary Judgment on the Seventh Count for Specific Performance or Alternatively for Partial Summary Judgment on the Eighth Count For Breach of Settlement Agreement ("Pis.' Mem.”) at 11:1-8.
.Reply Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Plaintiffs' Motion for Summary Judgment on the Seventh Count for Specific Performance or Alternatively for Partial Summary Judgment on the Eighth Count For Breach of Settlement Agreement ("Pis.' Reply”) at 18:14-19:3.
. Defs.' Add. Facts, ¶ 7; Pis.' Opp. Facts, ¶ 7.
. Brown Decl., Ex. 8.
. Id., Ex. 9.
. See id., Exs. 10-12.
. Id., Ex. 13.
. Id., Ex. 15.
. Id., Ex. 17.
. Id., Ex. 18.
. Id., Ex. 23.
. Pis.’ Reply at 18:14-25.
. See id. at 18:25-19:1.
. Pis.'Reply at 18:4-7.
. Id. at 18:1-3.
. See id. at 18:18-21 ("Accordingly, during that period [the life of the covenant not to sue], Inamed could not as a matter of law seek a declaratory judgment that the Kuzmak patents are invalid because Inamed would not have any reasonable apprehension of an infringement suit”).
. Inamed's counsel argued at the hearing that the reference in Inamed's brief to dismissal with prejudice of all claims except those regarding the '429 patent meant that claims regarding the '339 patent were to be dismissed with prejudice, while claims under all other patents were to be dismissed without prejudice. (See Reporter's Transcript ("RT”) at 15-16.) She indicated that the brief referenced the '429 patent because that is the only patent that Inamed believes could possibly cover its Lap Band product.
(Id.)
The lawyer representing Inamed in the negotiations leading up to
execution
of the January 24, 2000, letter agreement testified that he could remember no discussion as to whether the pending litigation matters would be dismissed with or without prejudice. (Chalsen Depo. at 125:11-17.) Similarly, he testified that he did not recall using the word “release” in discussions with Kuzmak’s counsel prior to January 24, 2000.
(Id.
at 90:17-91:5, 91:21-93:10. See also Defs.' Add. Facts, ¶ 24; Pis.’ Opp. Facts, ¶ 24 (acknowledging that parties did not discuss releases during negotiation of the January 24, 2000, letter agreement)). At the hearing, Inamed’s attorney argued that the parties "intended to release the claims that
. Brown Deck, Ex. 26.
. Id., Ex. 28.
. Inamed argues that the terms the court would have to imply in the instant case are no more material than those implied by the district court in
Core-Vent.
(RT at 12.) There, the court implied a term that limited the parties’ license agreement to products then being manufactured by the defendant as opposed to products it might manufacture and sell in the future.
Core-Vent, supra,
. Because the court concludes that the agreement lacks essential terms, it need not address the parties' remaining arguments regarding intent to be bound and consideration. The court notes, however, that with regard to the parties' intention to treat the January 24, 2000, letter agreement, there is a clear conflict in the evidence that would preclude the entry of summary judgment in either party's favor.
. In its opening brief, Inamed asserted that "Kuzmak ... failed to perform under the terms of the January 24, 2000 Letter Agreement” by "refusing] to complete the further document." (Pis.’ Mem. at 20:18-21.) In reply, it urged that Kuzmak "failed to perform his obligation to use best efforts to sign off on the more formal documents by manufacturing ‘disputes' regarding terms that had already been resolved ..., inserting vastly different terms ... in the March 29, 2000 letter ..., and shopping the deal with Inamed to Obtech, a German competitor of Inamed...." (Pis.’ Reply at 23, n. 12.) With the exception of the alleged third-party negotiations, the reply brief appears to reference the March 29, 2000, letter as the repudiation/breach. Moreover, as explained by its counsel at oral argument, Inamed concluded that "Kuzmak ... refused to complete” a more formal settlement agreement after it received the March 29, 2000, letter from Hunt. Thus, the opening brief also appears consistent with counsel’s representation at the hearing. The additional assertion that Kuzmak repudiated or breached the January 24, 2000, letter agreement by negotiating with a third party after the document had been executed is not supported by the record. The deposition excerpts cited by Inamed in support of this contention reflect that Kuzmak was in negotiations with Obtech prior to January 24, 2000, that he advised Obtech of the execution of the January 24, 2000, letter, and that, as of May 19, 2000, his attorney and Obtech were communicating with one another. (Brown Reply Deck, Ex. 2 (“Hunt Depo.”) at 21:19-25:6; 258:3^-263:2.) The May 19, 2000, communication asked for Obtech’s “thoughts regarding matching the agrеement in principle” with Inamed and "reaching an agreement where the Kuzmaks would get their money sooner than proposed.” {Id.., Ex. 136.) It also noted that Kuzmak "might be willing to consider simply selling the patents to [Obtech] outright....” (Id.) Inamed, of course, had filed suit against Kuzmak in New Jersey district court the prior month, on April 5, 2000. Thus, events that occurred after that date do not evidence repudiation. Indeed, the May 19, 2000, letter to Obtech .notes that "Inamed ha[d] recently sued the Kuzmaks on the patents in New Jersey...,” and that "there appear[ed] to be a dispute between the parties as to some aspects of the agreement” in principle that had been reached with Inamed in January. (Id.) Moreover, the letter itself evidences no commitment by Kuzmak to enter into an agreement with Obtech, and thus to place himself in a position where it would have been impossible for him to perform his obligations under the January 24, 2000, letter agreement. The entire tone of the letter is tentative and preliminary, and is consistent with Hunt’s testimony that Kuzmak had not agreed to accept Obtech’s "meet or exceed” offer, but only to ensure that Obtech was "informed what [In-amed's offer] was.” (Id. at 262:14-15.). There is, additionally, no evidence that Kuz-mak was negotiating with Obtech at any time after January 24, 2000, and prior to May 2000, or that any agreements had been reached between them. For these reasons, the May 19, 2000, communication cannot be said to constitute a clear and unequivocal repudiation of the January 24, 2000, letter agreement.
. Bamberger Dec!., Ex. 6.
. RT at 48.
. Bamberger Decl., Ex. 6.
. Id.
. Id.
. See Chalsen Depo. at 61:22-62:17, 65:9-18, 66:5-76:9.
. In assessing whether a party has repudiated an earlier oral agreement or letter of intent by submitting a non-conforming draft contract to the other party for signature, at least some courts examine whether the nonconforming term included in the draft concerns one of the substantive terms of the agreement or is merely a stylistic matter. In
Taylor v. Gordon Flesch Co., Inc.,
. Kuzmak's assignment of the patents to Ethicon might have constituted an anticipatory breach, but for the fact that it occurred long after Inamed filed suit in New Jersey, alleging breach of contract, and seeking damages as well as specific performance. Inamed also reasserted its claims of patent invalidity, patent misuse, and breach of the parties' license agreement in that suit, claims that In-amed contends were to have been dismissed pursuant to the January 24, 2000, letter agreement. (See Chalsen Depo., Ex. 21.) Kuzmak was thus entitled to treat the filing of the action as an indication that Inamed considered the contract terminated. See
Taylor, supra,
