Appellant Fred Hajjar appeals from the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the appellees on their complaint and on Hajjar’s counterclaims and third-party complaint. Finding that material questions of fact exist and that the district court misapprehended the basis for Hajjar’s claims, we reverse.
In 1991, appellant Fred Hajjar (“Hajjar”) was engaged in a consulting business when he was introduced to appellee Courtney Munson, president and principal shareholder of appellee Munson Transportation, Inc. (“Munson”), a trucking firm based in Monmouth, Illinois (and incorporated in the state of Delaware). Munson" "was experiencing some degree of financial trouble, and it hired Hajjar as a consultant in approximately October 1991. At the time, Hajjar and his family lived in Massachusetts. In approximately January 1992, Courtney Munson invited Haj-jar to join the company as an employee. To this end, Hajjar and Courtney Munson negotiated an employment contract (the “employment agreement”) setting forth the "terms of Hajjar’s employment. As part of then-agreement, Hajjar was to move his family to the Monmouth or Galesburg, Illinois area and in return would "receive a base salary of $3,000 per week, a bonus based on the profits of Munson, and a certain amount of vacation time. The agreement provided that if Hajjar was terminated within the first three years of his employment, he would receive a certain percentage of his salary as a severance package. Finally, the agreement stated that:
Stock options are granted for 6% of the outstanding stock as of Jan. 1, 1992. Price of the options are the book value of the stock as of Jan. 1,1992. Vesting of a third of the options (2% of outstanding stock) will occur on the first, second and third anniversary dates. Once vested the options will have a seven year term. In the event of a significant influx of equity (IPO, major private placement, merger, etc.) the full 6% will vest on the transaction date.
See Hajjar Appendix (“App.”) at 10. The employment agreement was signed by both Hajjar and Courtney Munson on May 5, 1992, and specified that January 6 was Haj-jar’s anniversary date of employment.
Things apparently went relatively smoothly until June or July of 1993, when Courtney Munson informed Hajjar that he was going to be terminated. True to his word, Courtney Munson fired Hajjar on approximately September 2, 1993. Although the employment agreement provided that Hajjar was to receive the severance pay in a lump-sum, Courtney Munson.-and Hajjar agreed that Hajjar would be paid in weekly installments instead. Hajjar was paid pursuant to the agreement for several weeks, after which the payments stopped. Hajjar inquired about this to.Courtney Munson, who informed him that he would not pay the total severance amount. Hajjar and Courtney Munson eventually entered into a written settlement agreement on several matters, including severance pay, outstanding salai-y, unpaid vacation time, and relocation assistance. Hajjar received a check for $16,182, which stated that it was for “final settlement of severance and all other obligations.”
In February 1994, Munson was acquired by appellee" Heartland, Inc. (“Heartland”), which is held by appellee Acquisition Corp. (“Acquisition”), a Nebraska holding company. In that same month, Hajjar attempted to exercise the stock options granted to him in the employment agreement, but Munson refused. Munson then filed a declaratory judgment action against Hajjar in the Cir.cuit Court of Warren County, Illinois, seeking a ruling that Hajjar,had no right to exercise the options. Munson claimed that the settlement reached between Courtney Munson and Hajjar had settled all of Munson’s outstanding obligations to Hajjar, that the employment agreement did not constitute a valid stock option plan under Delaware law, and that Hajjar had failed to exercise the options in a timely manner. Hajjar removed the case to the United States District Court for the Central District of Illinois, and filed several counterclaims against Munson and third-party claims against Heartland, Acquisition, and Courtney Munson.
After some discovery, Munson filed a motion for summary judgment on November 26, 1996, arguing that an accord and satisfaction had been reached between Munson and Haj-jar when Hajjar deposited the check stating that it- was a “final settlement of severance and all other obligations” and that Hajjar had not exercised his options within the time prescribed by a 1987 stock option plan. Judge Joe B. McDade denied this motion on February 26, 1997, finding that genuine issues of fact existed on the purported accord
DISCUSSION
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment &e novo. McGinn v. Burlington Northern Ry. Co.,
I. Jurisdiction
After oral argument in this case, we discovered a potential jurisdictional problem and ordered the parties to brief the issue. Specifically, the potential problem was that, while the district court’s judgment purported to be “final,” it appeared that several issues raised by the parties had not been addressed by the court. We were concerned as to whether we had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, the basis asserted by Hajjar. We have now determined that jurisdiction is in fact proper. The judgment entered by the district court stated that it was entered in favor of the appellees and against Hajjar “on the original claim for declaratory relief as well as all counterclaims” and third-party claims, and stated that “[t]his ease is termi-* nated.” See App. at 508. When determining the finality of a judgment, we look to the judgment’s language. If the language used is calculated to conclude all the claims before the district court, the judgment is final. Armstrong v. Trico Marine, Inc.,
II. Employment Agreement
Turning to the merits of this appeal, Haj-jar first argues that the district court erred in finding that his employment agreement with Munson, which set forth the fact that he was to receive certain stock options, did not constitute a valid stock option plan and did not provide Hajjar with any option lights. The employment agreement stated that:
Stock options are granted for 6% of the outstanding stock as of Jan. 1,1992. Price of the options are the book value of the stock as of Jan. 1,1992. Vesting of a third of the options (2% of outstanding stock) will occur on the first, second and third anniversary dates. Once vested the options will have a seven year term. In the event of a significant influx of equity (IPO, major private placement, merger, etc.) the full 6% will vest on the transaction date.
See App. at 10.
The Delaware Supreme Court has determined that “[t]he issuance of stock option plans by Delaware corporations involves the internal affairs of a Delaware corporation and is, therefore, controlled by the laws of Delaware.” Beard v. Elster,
Subject to any provisions in the certificate of incorporation, every corporation may create and issue, whether or not in connection with the issue and sale of any shares of stock or other securities of the corporation, rights or options entitling the holders thereof to purchase from the corporation any shares of its capital stock of any class or classes, such rights or options to be evidenced by or in such instrument or instruments as shall be approved by the board of directors.
The terms upon which, including the time or times which may be limited or unlimited in duration at or within which, and the price or prices at which any such shares may be purchased from the corporation upon the exercise of any such right or option, shall be such as shall be stated in the certificate of incorporation, or in a resolution adopted by the board of directors providing for the creation and issue of such rights or options, and, in every case, shall be set forth or incorporated by reference in the instrument or instruments evidencing such rights or options. In the absence of actual fraud in the transaction, the judgment of the directors as to the consideration for the issuance of such rights or options and the sufficiency thereof shall be conclusive.
Del.Code Ann. tit. 8 § 157 (1997). The district court found that the employment agreement failed to meet these requirements, specifically because the options were not “evidenced by or in such instrument or instruments as shall be approved by the board of directors.” Mem. Op. at 6. Hajjar contests this finding on appeal.
The main issue contested by Hajjar is the issue of ratification: was the employment agreement “adopted” by the Munson Board of Directors, as required by Delaware law? As part of his argument, Hajjar contests the district court’s refusal to consider (as admissible evidence) a document entitled “Consent in Lieu of the 1992 Annual Meeting of the Board of Directors of Munson Transportation, Inc.”
Conflicting evidence, other than the purported consent, was submitted by the parties on the issue of ratification. In its memorandum in support of summary judgment and its Statement of Undisputed Facts, Munson admitted that the Hajjar employ
Hajjar presented another ratification argument which was not considered by the district court. See Rec. Doc. 83. Citing Michelson v. Duncan,
Munson also questions the district court’s determination that another stock option plan controls his grant of options. In 1987, Mun-son’s Board of Directors approved a stock option plan (“1987 Plan”) which set forth the specific rules governing grants of stock options to employees. Unlike Hajjar’s employment agreement, which states that he can exercise the options within seven years from the time they vest, the 1987 Plan provides that stock options end thirty days after an employee is terminated without cause. See App. at 18 ¶ 13. In the district court, the appellees argued that the 1987 Plan was the only validly executed stock option plan and that it must control the stock options purportedly granted to Hajjar in the employment agreement. In its opinion denying Munson’s first motion for summary judgment, the district court agreed, finding that “paragraph 3 of the Employment Agreement was never independently enforceable under
In summary, we find that questions of fact exist as to whether the Hajjar employment agreement was ratified by the Munson Board of Directors or by the shareholders of Mun-son, and whether the 1987 Plan controls Haj-jar’s options. Accordingly, the district court’s determination that the employment agreement could not, as a matter of Delaware law, have granted Hajjar stock options must be reversed, and this issue remanded for further proceedings. On remand, the district court should consider whether the purported consent is admissible, giving whichever party that wants the document admitted a chance to lay a proper foundation.
III. Counterclaims and Third-Party Claims
After determining that the 1987 Plan was the only valid plan by which stock options could have been granted to Hajjar, the district court turned to the counterclaims and third-party claims asserted by Hajjar against Munson and the third-party defendants. In Count I,
The district court found that because the employment agreement did not constitute a valid stock option plan under Delaware law and because Hajjar “stubbornly insist[ed] upon relying on” it, Hajjar’s counterclaims and third-party claims failed as a matter of law. With regard to Counts I, II, IV, and V, the court stated that “[b]y continuing to insist that [the 1987] plan does not apply to his Employment Agreement, Hajjar has foreclosed any possible relief under the law on these counterclaims and third-party claims.” Since we have found that material issues of fact exist on the subject of the employment agreement’s validity as a stock option plan and whether the 1987 Plan otherwise controls Hajjar’s options, the grant of summary judgment on these counts must be reversed.
In addition, the district court’s judgment in favor of the appellees must be reversed because it is premised on an erroneous reading
Hajjar’s Third Counterclaim, which the district court discussed separately from the other counts, alleged that Munson “failed to do the necessary administrative and adminis-terial acts to qualify Hajjar for employee stock options ... and thereby breached the contract of employment between Hajjar and Munson Corporation.” App. at 45. The district court granted Munson summary judgment on this Count because it did not allege a breach of contract claim — the employment agreement contained no express or implied terms detailing what Munson had to do to perfect Hajjar’s stock options. See Mem. Op. at 11. Our reading of this Count, however, shows that Hajjar alleges, in essence, that even assuming that the 1987 Plan controls the grant of stock options, Munson failed to carry through on its promise to give him stock options by failing to validly create such options under the 1987 Plan. See Mem. Op. at 10 (quoting from Hajjar’s brief in opposition to summary judgment). While the employment agreement did not outline how options were to be granted to Hajjar, the 1987 Plan does contain such terms, and Hajjar is claiming that Munson’s failure to follow the procedures in the 1987 Plan breached its promise to grant him options. As Hajjar states in his brief, this is a claim for a breach of the employment agreement by failing to legally set up the promised options, not a claim for a breach of the 1987 Plan, and the district court was similarly erroneous in granting Munson summary judgment on this claim.
In summary, we find that the district court incorrectly interpreted Hajjar’s counterclaims and third-party claims, and as a result erroneously granted summary judgment to the appellees. Accordingly, we reverse the grant of summary judgment to Munson, Courtney Munson, Acquisition, and Heartland on Hajjar’s counterclaims and third-party claims.
CONCLUSION
Questions of fact exist regarding whether the Munson-Hajjar employment agreement meets the requirements of Delaware law in order to constitute a stock option plan and, if it does not, whether the 1987 Plan controls the options promised to Hajjar. Furthermore, the district court erroneously dismissed Hajjar’s counterclaims and third-party claims based on its understanding that the claims were premised on violations of the 1987 Plan. Accordingly, we Reverse the district court’s judgment in favor of the appel-lees and Remand this case for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. Circuit Rule 36 shall apply on remand.
Notes
. It is not entirely clear which party sought to put this document into evidence first, although the first copy we could find in the record was attached to Hajjar's response to Munson's first motion for summary judgment.
. Munson argues that even if the document is admissible, it is of little value because on its face it approves only of "acts” performed by corporate officers, not stock options granted by it. This semantic challenge is unpersuasive, since the very granting of stock options involved an "act" performed by Munson.
. As in the district court, Hajjar also asserts that because Munson is a closely-hcld corporation, Delaware law makes ratification of the employment agreement unnecessary. See Appellant’s Brief at 1617 (citing Hessler, Inc. v. Farrell,
. For simplification, we will refer to Hajjar's various claims as "Count I," "Count II,” etc., rather than the designations used in Hajjar’s Second Amended Counter and Third Party Claims (e.g., "Fourth Counter, Third-Party Claim”).
. In its brief to this court, the appellees state that all of Hajjar's claims fail to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. They provided no legal analysis of why this is so, and wc will not consider such unsupported allegations.
