***103Thе issue on this appeal is whether the documentary evidence proffered by defendant Evolution Markets, Inc. on its motion to dismiss pursuant to CPLR 3211(a)(1) conclusively refuted plaintiff Andrew Kolchins's breach of contract claims. We hold that defendant has not met its burden and we, therefore, affirm.
I
Defendant is a corporation that structures transactions and provides brokerage and advisory services in the global environmental and energy commodity marketplace. In 2005, plaintiff joined defendant as a commodities broker and, in 2006, the parties entered into an employment agreement with a three-year term. Subsequently, in 2009, plaintiff and defendant entered into another three-year employment agreement with an "ending date" of August 31, 2012.
Under the 2009 agreement, plaintiff was an "at will" employee; however, if defendant terminated him without "Cause" or he ceased employment for "Good Reason," and he complied with certain restrictive covenants, he would be paid his base salary through the ending date, as well as a "special non-compete payment" thereafter.
The 2009 agreement also provided for minimum "Guaranteed Compensation" of $750,000 each contract year. The guaranteed ***104compensation consisted оf plaintiff's "base salary and any bonus paid or payable" to him for such period, but did not include the amount paid as his sign on bonus. In that regard, the 2009 agreement provided that, "[f]or the avoidance of doubt, your bonus to be paid to you in respect of the second trimester of 2009 is not included in the calculation of your guaranteed compensation." However, any special non-compete payment made during the last year of the agreement would "count towards your guaranteed compensation." Critically, the 2009 agreement also set forth that, "in order to be eligible to receive any Production Bonus, bonus from the Discretionary Management Bonus Pool, or Guaranteed Compensation, you must be actively employed ... at the time of оur firm-wide bonus payment dates."
On June 15, 2012, as the ending date of the 2009 agreement approached, defendant's chief executive officer, Andrew Ertel, sent plaintiff an email with the subject line "In writing," which stated that, "[t]he terms of our offer are the same [as the] terms of your existing contract (other than a clarification around the issue of departed members of the team), and include: [а] 3 year term[,] $200,000 base salary[,] $750,000 sign on bonus ... [,] $750,000 per year minimum cash compensation[, and the same] production bonus." He added, "[a]ny further questions, let me know but u[sic] do have your existing contract." One month later, on July 16, plaintiff responded by email with "I accept, pls [sic] send contract," to which Ertel replied, "Mazel. Looking forward to another great run." Following this exchange, plaintiff and defendant's general counsel, Benjamin Zeliger, communicated by email and in person over the ensuing weeks in an unsuccessful attempt to reduce the parties' mutual understanding to a more formal written instrument. Despite these efforts, defendant notified plaintiff, by letter dated September 1, 2012, that his employment had ceased upon the expiration of the 2009 agreement.
Plaintiff then commenced this breach of contract action against defendant, alleging that the parties had entered into a valid and binding contract setting forth the terms of his continued employment with defendant. Plaintiff alleged that the June 15 and July 16 email correspondence with Ertel constituted a written confirmation of the new agreement. Plaintiff also sought to recover amounts allegеdly still owed to him under the 2009 agreement, including a special non-compete payment and a final production bonus. He asserted that the ***105production bonus was vested and earned as of the ending date of the 2009 agreement.
Prior to answering the complaint, defendant moved for, among other things, an order dismissing plaintiff's breach of contract claims pursuant to CPLR 3211(a)(1). In suppоrt of its motion, defendant annexed as exhibits the email and letter correspondence between the parties, as well as the parties' prior employment agreements. As relevant here, Supreme Court denied defendant's motion insofar as it *787sought to dismiss plaintiff's breach of contract claims ( 2013 N.Y. Slip Op.31978[U],
On defendant's appeal, the Appellate Division, with one Justicе dissenting, modified Supreme Court's order by dismissing so much of the breach of contract cause of action that sought to recover a special non-compete payment under the 2009 agreement, and otherwise affirmed (
The Appellate Division granted defendant leave to appeal to this Court, certifying the question of whether its order was properly made.
II
Because this case is before us on a CPLR 3211(a)(1) motion to dismiss, we must "accept the facts as alleged in the complaint as true, accord plaintiff[ ] the benefit of every possible ***106inferencе, and determine only whether the facts as alleged fit within any cognizable legal theory" (Leon v. Martinez,
In considering whether а binding contract exists, "[t]he first step ... is to determine whether there is a sufficiently definite offer such that its unequivocal acceptance will give rise to an enforceable contract" (Matter of Express Indus. & Term. Corp. v. New York State Dept. of Transp. ,
"it is necessary to look ... to the objective manifestations of the intent of the parties as gathered by their expressed words and deeds. In doing so, disproportionate emphasis is not to be put on any single act, phrase or other expression, but, instead, on the totality of all of these, given the attendant circumstances, *788the situation of the parties, and the objectives they were striving to attain"
(
Of course, "[i]f an agreement is not reasоnably certain in its material terms, there can be no legally enforceable contract" (Cobble Hill Nursing Home v. Henry & Warren Corp. ,
***107(Joseph Martin, Jr., Delicatessen, Inc. v. Schumacher ,
Here, we conclude that, based on all the documentary evidence proffered by defendant, a reasonable fact-finder could determine that a binding contract was formed. Ertel's initial email to plaintiff stated that "[t]he terms of our offer are the same [as the] terms of your existing contract"-apart from "a clarification" concerning an issue that plaintiff characterizes as minor-and outlined the core terms that were included in the 2009 agreement. He added that, if plaintiff had "[a]ny further questions" he should consult his "existing contract." Inasmuch as this email explained that "the terms of the offer" were to be nearly identical to the terms of plaintiff's existing contract, a reasonable factfinder could interpret it as evincing an objective manifestation of defendant's intent to enter into a bargain, such that plаintiff was justified "in understanding that his assent to that bargain [was] invited and [would] conclude it" ( Restatement [Second] of Contracts § 24 [1981] ). Put differently, it could reasonably be inferred that Ertel's email constituted a valid offer by defendant. In response to that email, plaintiff wrote "I accept. pls [sic] send contract," to which Ertel replied, "Mazel. Looking forward to another great run."
*789Affording plaintiff the benefit of every favorable inference, this exchange-in essence, we "offer" and "I accept," followed by an arguably congratulatory exclamation, coupled with a forward-***108looking statement about the next stage of the parties' continuing relationship-sufficiently evinces an objective manifestation of an intent to be bound for purposes of surviving a motion tо dismiss.
We reject defendant's argument that plaintiff's contract claim should have been dismissed because the additional correspondence defendant proffered in support of its motion to dismiss reflects a lack of mutual assent to material terms-such as plaintiff's minimum guaranteed compensation and the length of the non-compete term-and that this indefiniteness renders the purported contract invalid as a matter of law. As the Appellate Division concluded, that correspondence does not conclusively refute contract formation (see Goshen ,
III
The courts below also correctly denied defendant's motion to dismiss as it relates to plaintiff's claim for a Production ***109Bonus. As a general matter, "an employee's entitlement to a bonus is governed by the terms оf the employer's bonus plan" ( Truelove v. Northeast Capital & Advisory ,
Defendant contends that plaintiff's claim regarding his entitlement to a production bonus for the second trimester of 2012 is barred by the express terms of the 2009 agreement, which provide that, in order to receive the bonus, plaintiff had to be actively employed by defendant at the time all such firm-wide bonuses were paid. Because it is undisputed that he was not so employed when the bonus at issue was paid, defendant maintains that the bonus was never "earned," as a matter of law, under our decision in Truelove . We disagree. The terms of the compensation plan at issue in Truelove did not predicate bonus payments on the plaintiff's personal productivity; rather, the plaintiff's share of the bonus pool was based on his employer's overall financial success, and was entirely discretionary (see
Contrary to defendant's argument here, the terms of the 2009 agreement do not conclusively establish that the production bonus was not vested and earned as of the contract's ending date. That agreement expressly provided that plaintiff was "eligible to be paid a bonus on a trimester basis based on [his] performance. " Although the agreement sets forth a calculation for the "total bonus pool" available as a percentage of net earnings of the renewable energy brokerage desk, plaintiff managed that desk. Significantly, unlike the compensation plan at issue in Truelove , there is language in the 2009 agreement that ***110could be read as providing that plaintiff's bonus was predicated on his personal productivity, rather than solely on dеfendant's overall success. Moreover, the language of the 2009 agreement does not conclusively establish that the bonus was discretionary. Indeed, under an earlier employment agreement between the parties, plaintiff was eligible for a similar trimester-based bonus at the "exclusive and sole discretion" of defendant, but that discretionary language was not carried over to the 2009 agreement. Likewise, pursuant to the 2009 agreement, other aspects of plaintiff's compensation package were specifically described as "discretionary," while the production bonus was not.
To the extent the production bonus was not discretionary and, instead, was based only on plaintiff's performance as a manager during his final trimester of employment-a question not conclusively answered by the language of the agreement-the bonus could constitute nonforfeitable "wages." In that event, any provision of the 2009 agreement that would operate to deny plaintiff those wages after they were "earned" based on the timing of payment would be void as against public policy under article 6 of the Labor Law.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs, and the certified question answered in the affirmative.
Order affirmed, with costs, and certified question answered in the affirmative.
Chief Judge DiFiore and Judges Rivera, Fahey, Garcia and Wilson concur. Judge Feinman took no part.
Notes
The restrictive covenants prohibited plaintiff from, among other things, working for a competitor for six months after his employment with defendant ceased.
Under the agreement, "[t]he total bonus pool available to the Eastern U.S. renewable energy brokerage desk [that plaintiff managed] ... [would] be no less than 55% of the Net Earnings of [that dеsk]."
In addition, the Court held that "there is no blanket rule by which email is to be excluded from consideration as documentary evidence under [CPLR 3211(a)(1) ] )" (id. at 59 ).
In response to the Appellate Division's interpretation that "[m]azel is an obvious reference to '[m]azel tov' or 'mazal tov,' a Hebrew or Yiddish phrase used to express congratulations for a happy and significant occasiоn or event" (
As defendant notes, prior to his July 16 response to Ertel's initial email, plaintiff notified defendant of his intent not to renew the 2009 agreement, which otherwise would have automatically continued for an additional one-year term. Although defendant maintains that this notice constituted a rejection of Ertel's email, a reasonable fаct-finder could determine otherwise, on the basis, for example, that plaintiff's decision not to renew the 2009 agreement for a one-year term was consistent with an intent to enter into a new agreement with the same material provisions, including a three-year term.
Defendant also relies upon Pachter v. Bernard Hodes Group, Inc.,
