David KNIGGE, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. B & L FOOD STORES, INC. AND ESTATE OF Robert Allen KNIGGE, Defendants and Appellees.
27807-r-SLZ
Supreme Court of South Dakota.
02/01/2017
2017 S.D. 4 | 890 N.W.2d 570
ARGUED ON JANUARY 10, 2017
KRISTEN M. KOCHEKIAN of Gillette Law Office, PC, Redfield, South Dakota, Attorneys for defendants and appellees.
ZINTER, Justice
[¶1.] David Knigge entered into an oral employment contract with his brother, Robert Knigge, to manage a grocery store that was owned by Robert and his wife Lynette. David entered into the contract in part because Robert had cancer and a limited time to live. The contract allegedly included a severance payment to David if Lynette desired to end David‘s employment after Robert‘s death. Robert died five months after the contract was negotiated, and Lynette terminated David‘s employment two months later. When Lynette refused to pay the severance, David sued to enforce the agreement. The circuit court granted summary judgment dismissing the suit. The court ruled that the oral contract was unenforceable under the statute of frauds. Because this contract was not governed by the statute of frauds, we reverse and remand.
Facts and Procedural History
[¶2.] Robert was a shareholder in corporations that operated grocery stores in Redfield, South Dakota (B & L Food Stores, Inc.), Linton, North Dakota (K & B Foods, Inc.), and Oakes, North Dakota (K & J Foods, Inc.). The B & L stock was owned by Robert and Lynette. Robert actively managed all three stores. Lynette did not participate in management of the Redfield store before Robert‘s death.
[¶3.] In October 2011, Robert was diagnosed with stage 4 glioblastoma, a form of brain cancer. He was given approximately eighteen months to live. In November 2012, Robert asked his brother David if he would be interested in managing the Oakes store—which was then being managed by Kalie, Lynette‘s daughter from a prior marriage. At that time, David had worked for the State as a certified public accountant in Pierre for thirty years. Robert and David orally agreed that David would manage the Oakes store without a salary and would have the option to purchase the store for $200,000. When Kalie left the Oakes store prematurely, David resigned from his accounting position and used accrued vacation leave to maintain a steady income while he transitioned to his new position. He put his home up for sale and commuted to Oakes to manage the store on weekends.
[¶4.] Robert‘s condition deteriorated, and in January 2013, he was informed that further treatment was unavailable. According to David, Robert wished to maintain the Redfield store as a legacy for his children1 but felt that his son Jason was not ready to manage it. Because Robert had limited time to live and could not manage
[¶5.] Lynette did not participate in Robert‘s negotiations with David, but she overheard Robert discussing contract terms on the phone with David, including David‘s salary and the possibility of a bonus. She contended that she never heard Robert mention a severance package or that David would receive health insurance benefits. She did, however, acknowledge the possibility that Robert had other negotiations regarding David‘s employment.
[¶6.] Robert died in June 2013. David continued managing the Redfield store until Lynette terminated his employment in August 2013, approximately five months after David‘s employment began and seven months after the contract was formed. Although Lynette learned of the existence of the severance agreement from two associates approximately a week before she terminated David, she refused to pay David the severance. David subsequently sued B & L and Robert‘s estate (Defendants) for breach of contract.
[¶7.] Defendants did not dispute the existence of the employment contract. They did, however, dispute the existence of terms providing for both health insurance and the severance payment. They moved for summary judgment, arguing that the oral employment contract was unenforceable under the one-year provision of the statute of frauds. See
[¶8.] The circuit court agreed with Defendants and granted their motion for summary judgment. It ruled that the oral contract was unenforceable under the statute of frauds because it could not be performed within one year. The court found that the contract was for an unspecified term of years and tied to contingencies that could not occur in one year: David‘s
Decision
[¶9.] The statute of frauds, codified in
[¶10.] Thus, oral employment contracts for a specified term of years are within the statute if the employment will not end within one year from the time the parties entered into the contract. Trovese, 493 N.W.2d at 222 (stating that a contract for one-year term, entered into one week before employment began, was within the statute because it could not be performed for one year and one week); Brown v. Wis. Granite Co., 47 S.D. 635, 201 N.W. 555, 556-57 (1924) (stating that a contract for one-year term, entered into two months before employment began, was within the statute because it could not be performed for one year and two months). And a contract of employment for an indefinite term falls within the statute if the evidence is clear that the parties intended a long-term contract with no expectation that performance would be complete within one year. Harriman v. United Dominion Indus., Inc., 2005 S.D. 18, ¶ 20, 693 N.W.2d 44, 49. Termination of employment alone, however, does not remove an oral employment contract from the statute of frauds, even if termination in fact occurred within one year. See id.; Trovese, 493 N.W.2d at 222; Brown, 47 S.D. 635, 201 N.W. at 557. The question is whether the parties intended in law and fact that the contract could be fully performed before the expiration of a year.
[¶11.] Here, the circuit court ruled that David‘s oral contract fell within the statute because it was tied to contingencies that could not occur within one year (David‘s retirement or the minor children reaching majority and taking over the business). However, the court failed to address the additional contingency that formed the basis for the alleged $100,000 severance agreement: Lynette ending David‘s employment after Robert‘s impending death. On a motion for summary judgment, “[t]he evidence must be viewed
[¶12.] According to David, he and Robert were concerned about David‘s employment after Robert‘s impending death. David testified that they had specifically considered that Lynette and David had a strained relationship, that she might not want David to manage the store after Robert‘s death, and that they contemplated that David would not continue to manage the store if that was Lynette‘s wish. Additionally, although the parties did not know for certain when Robert‘s death would occur, there is no dispute that Robert had a very limited time to live when he made the contract with David. Indeed, Robert was fifteen months into his eighteen-month prognosis and had been informed that no further treatment was available. Viewing this evidence in a light most favorable to David, David and Robert specifically contemplated David‘s termination occurring within one year. Under these facts, the contemplated early termination was a method of completing David‘s performance. Thus, this case is unlike Harriman, Trovese, and Brown, where early termination did not constitute complete performance of the agreements. In this case, early termination was contemplated and therefore the contract “by its terms” could have been performed in law and fact within one year.5 The circuit court erred in ruling that the contract was unenforceable under the statute of frauds. Because there are disputes of material fact regarding the existence of the severance term, we reverse and remand for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.6
[¶13.] GILBERTSON, Chief Justice, and SEVERSON, WILBUR, and KERN, Justices, concur.
