This appeal stems from a discrimination suit filed by plaintiff-appellant Marie M. Ma-lave against her quondam employer, Carney Hospital (the Hospital). 1 In the underlying case, Malave alleged disparate treatment on the basis of disability, race, and national origin. In the midst of discovery, the opposing lawyers agreed to a $15,000 settlement. Nevertheless, when the Hospital’s counsel forwarded a proposed settlement agreement, the appellant refused to execute it, claiming that she had never authorized her attorney to settle the ease for less than $30,000.
The Hospital asked the district court to enforce the purported settlement. The court granted the motion without holding an evi-dentiary hearing. This appeal followed. 2
As a general rule, a trial court may not summarily enforce a purported settlement agreement if there is a genuinely disputed question of material fact regarding the existence or terms of that agreement. In such circumstances, the cases consentingly hold that the court instead must take evidence to resolve the contested issues of fact.
See Murchison v. Grand Cypress Hotel Corp.,
When the Hospital filed its motion to enforce, it tendered an unsigned copy of a draft settlement agreement and its counsel’s affidavit explaining its version of the attendant circumstances. The lawyer, Michael F.X. Dolan, Jr., recounted “back and forth” conversations with his opposite number, Matthew Cobb, during which Cobb made a settlement demand of $15,000. Dolan stated that he agreed to pay the demanded sum in return for a stipulation of dismissal and a general release. He then transmitted a proposed agreement to Cobb both by facsimile and by mail. 3 Though the agreement seems prolix and eovers a multitude of subjects (e.g., a waiver of any right to reemployment; a covenant not to comment on the payment or to speak ill of the releasees), the Hospital takes the position that it was boilerplate.
There is no way that these materials, standing alone, would justify summarily enforcing a settlement agreement. Evidence supplied by one side to the dispute, especially nontestimonial evidence not subject to cross-examination, ordinarily will not suffice to ground enforcement of an ostensible settlement.
See Hardage,
Even though the document that Cobb filed declared that he had received authority from Malave to effectuate a $15,000 settlement, it
Moreover, this was not an instance in which the existence of the settlement had somehow been conceded previously by both parties or in which the court had been able to acquire personal knowledge through, for example, a settlement conference or a hearing.
See Murchison,
Setting the nature and quality of the requisite evidence to one side, the Hospital argues that the purported settlement must stand because it (the Hospital) relied on Cobb’s representations about his' authority. In mounting this argument, the Hospital draws upon the doctrine of apparent authority, under which third parties who detrimentally rely on an agent’s unauthorized representations sometimes may hold the principal to the consequences of such reliance.
See, e.g., Veranda Beach Club Ltd. Partnership v. Western Surety Co.,
This rule rests on the salutary proposition that the decision to settle litigation belongs to the client, not the lawyer.
See Michaud,
There is also the Hospital’s contention, emphasized at oral argument, that we should overlook all else because there has been an accord and satisfaction. In its most familiar iteration, accord and satisfaction envisions that the parties will settle a dispute on terms requiring payment by one party of a sum greater than that which he admits he owed and receipt by the other party of a sum less than that which she claims is due, thereby extinguishing the underlying claim.
See, e.g., Cadle Co. v. Hayes,
First, in this context, an accord and satisfaction requires a voluntary, mutually assented to exchange of money for a release. See id. There is absolutely no evidence of volun-tariness or mutuality here, and what little we know points the other way. As the Hospital itself admits in its brief, it sent a check to Cobb, for Malave, pursuant to the instructions set forth in the district court’s enforcement order. 7 That order was the functional equivalent of a mandatory injunction. These circumstances hardly bespeak either volun-tariness or mutuality.
The second basis for rejecting the Hospital's accord and satisfaction argument relates to the bedrock rule of appellate practice that, except in the most extraordinary circumstances (not present here), matters not raised in the trial court cannot be hawked for the first time on appeal.
See National Ass’n of Soc. Workers v. Harwood,
The fact that the purported accord and satisfaction took place after the district court entered the enforcement order does not relieve a litigant who wishes to rely on it of the obligation to bring that matter first to the trial court’s attention. Accord and satisfaction is a fact-based defense — and one important reason for the rule requiring litigants to broach matters initially with the trial court is that adherence to it allows the parties to develop the relevant facts. In turn, this gives a court which possesses a factfinding capability an opportunity to resolve new issues in an informed manner — a praxis that provides invaluable assistance when the appellate court thereafter performs its reviewing function. Here, there are no facts in the record concerning the ostensible accord and satisfaction — merely assertions. We cannot intelligently decide cases on so problematic a basis.
We need go no further.
8
Summary enforcement of arm’s-length settlements is a useful device to hold litigants to their word, but the procedure ought to be reserved for situations in which a struck bargain is admitted or proved, and the basis for nonperformance is insubstantial. Thus, when a district court purposes summarily to enforce a settlement, it first must ascertain whether or not a binding agreement in fact existed. The evidence before the district court in this case raised too many unanswered questions as to the existence
vel non
of such an agreement. Therefore, the court ought not to have granted the Hospital’s motion to enforce the purported’settlement
The order enforcing the putative settlement is vacated and the case is remanded to the district court for further proceedings.
Notes
. Malave’s complaint also named a supervisor, Carol Krzywda, as a codefendant. For ease in reference, we refer to the employer as if it alone had been sued. Our ruling, of course, binds both Krzywda and the Hospital.
. Ten days before the appellant docketed her notice of appeal, she filed a motion for relief from judgment in the district court, see Fed. R.Civ.P. 60(b), incorporating within it affidavits from her and her new counsel, respectively. The district court denied the motion. Because we hold that the court erred in summarily enforcing the purported settlement, see text infra, we have no occasion to discuss the denial of the Rule 60(b) motion. Accordingly, we have not considered either that motion or the materials annexed to it for purposes of this opinion.
. Curiously, the Hospital did not attach the transmittal letter to the motion papers, and we have been unable to locate it in the record.
. Although Cobb styled this pleading as "Plaintiff’s Verified Response to Defendant’s Motion to Enforce Settlement and General Release” (emphasis in the original), it is signed only by Cobb on behalf of Cobb.
. Indeed, Attorney Cobb’s submission closed by stating that ”[i]n the interest of fairness to all Parties, the Court should, after Notice to all Parties, conduct an evidentiary hearing to determine whether the settlement in this action is binding.” In connection with his request for an evidentiary hearing. Attorney Cobb went so far as to offer to “submit to the Court in camera currently privileged documents and testimony indicating that the settlement was reached with Ma-lave’s full consent and authority.”
. We note in passing that the outcome would be the same were we to base our analysis on considerations of apparent authority. While in some settings an agent’s apparent authority may be sufficient to bind the principal, that result invariably requires justifiable reliance by the aggrieved party.
See, e.g., Veranda Beach Club,
. The lower court’s order stipulated that the ”[d]efendants shall deliver to Attorney Matthew Cobb as attorney for Marie M. Malave a check in the amount of fifteen thousand and no/100 Dollars ($15,000.00) ("Settlement Amount”) made payable to ’Matthew Cobb, Esquire/Attomey for Maude M. Malave.’ ” It then adds: “Attorney Cobb, as soon as practicable after receipt of the Settlement Amount, shall deposit it into his IOLTA account and disburse the Settlement Amount according to his fee agreement with Plaintiff."
. We need not reach (and, therefore, express no opinion on) the appellant’s argument that, in all events, the terms of the settlement agreement prepared by Attorney Dolan far exceeded the scope of the authority that Attorney Cobb claimed to have extracted from his client.
