Dr. James A. Schell appeals the trial court’s judgment, in a bench-tried case, in favor of respondent Life Mark. Schell had filed a breach of contract suit against Life-Mark for not paying him severance pay he claimed was owed him under a four-year employment contract between the two. Because LifeMark terminated Schell without cause and because LifeMark had a contractual obligation to pay severance pay if it terminated Schell without cause, this court reverses the trial court’s judgment.
Factual & Procedural History
On July 1, 1993, Dr. Schell and Life-Mark entered into an employment contract according to which Schell would provide medical services to patients provided by LifeMark, and LifeMark would take over Schell’s practice. As compensation, Schell would receive a base salary of $93,750 per year and incentive compensation equal to fifty percent of receipts from medical services when those services exceeded $75,000 per year. Because Schell’s pay was dependent on the payer mix — that is, the relative percentage of fee-for-service providers versus providers who solely pay a flat fee for patient care the two parties agreed that “in the event of a change in payor [sic ] mix” they would “renegotiate” the incentive pay provision. “Failure to renegotiate same within 30 days of the annual anniversary of th[e] [ajgreement [e.g., July 1, 1996] shall constitute a termination without cause.”
Section G of the contract, titled “Termination Without Cause,” allowed LifeMark to terminate the agreement without cause so long as it provided Schell 30 days written notice. It also stated: “In that event, [LifeMark] agrees to make severance payments to [Schell] in the amount of 6 months compensation plus one additional month for every three months of full-time employment starting from July 1, 1993; however, total severance shall not exceed 18 months compensation.” In addition, § G required LifeMark to notify Schell in writing if it did not intend to renew the employment agreement; failing to notify would be a termination without cause.
The contract commenced on July 1, 1993, and was slated to continue for four years thereafter, “unless sooner terminated in accordance” with the employment contract.
During the last six months of 1995, Life-Mark proposed increasing the number of managed care plan in which it participated, starting January 1, 1996. In December, 1995, Schell took a two week vacation in addition to taking off the regular holidays, thus resulting in a $16,550 drop in his income for that month. On May 1, 1996, Life Mark
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notified Schell that it did not
On July 1, 1996, an anniversary date, Schell notified LifeMark that he felt he had experienced a substantial and continuing change in payer mix since June 30, 1993, necessitating renegotiation of his incentive pay compensation. In a table, Schell juxtaposed the payer mix for the January 1, 1996 — June 30 period with that for the July 1, 1992 — June 30, 1996 period. It purported to show a drop in fee-for-service (“commercial”) providers, from 27.2 to 15.2 percent of total receipts, with an increase from zero to 9.1 percent of HMO providers. Schell proposed a new compensation package, to wit: base pay of $93, 750; supplemental pay of $85,000 for services as a Medical Director/Technical Supervisor to compensate for “negative effects of administrative policies”; and incentive pay in the amount of 30 percent of booked charges in excess of $76,500 per year. Schell also floated the idea of relative value units (RVUs) as a better basis for incentive pay.
In response, on July 16, 1996, LifeMark expressed willingness to review the relevant data and to enter into a new employment contract. LifeMark proposed that any new compensation provision would start on June 1, 1997 — one month before the natural termination of the original agreement. It rejected basing incentive pay on booked charges because they would conflict with a contract it had with a third party, Telnet; stated that it did not believe supplemental pay of $85,000 for a medical directorship was acceptable because incentive pay must directly represent performance; and denied that any change in payer mix of less than twelve percent was significant, since seventy percent of Schell’s business, represented by Medicare and Medicaid payers, remained unchanged.
Schell responded on July 19, 1996, stating that he did not understand why any new incentive pay provision would not apply to the new contract period. Schell stated that he did not see why the acceptability of booked charges should turn on whether Telnet gave a thumbs up, since his contract was with LifeMark. Nonetheless, Schell proposed basing incentive pay on RVUs. Schell pointed out that another doctor who provided services similar to those he (Schell) provided had received $90,000 per year from LifeMark as a medical director.
On August 5, 1996, LifeMark and Schell met to discuss their correspondence. During the meeting, the parties discussed payer mix, incentive compensation, using RVUs as basis for compensation, and a medical directorship. According to Life-Mark’s testimony, Schell said that, unless he received a medical directorship and $220,000 a year, he would not renew the agreement. LifeMark informed Schell that there was no medical directorship available and proposed dividing incentive pay into a managed-care portion and a fee-for-service portion.
Six days later, Schell sent LifeMark a draft of incentive pay based on RVUs. He told LifeMark that the divided incentive pay was a nonstarter. On September 1, 1996, Schell notified LifeMark that he was terminating their contract because Life-Mark had not renegotiated the incentive pay compensation provision by July 31, 1996. Accordingly, Schell said that Life-Mark owed him $199,284.28 in severance pay. Because LifeMark had rejected the
Schell filed a petition for breach-of-contract damages, specifically seeking severance pay of $199,248.02. After a bench trial, the trial court found that: (1) both parties violated the covenant of good faith and fair dealing in their renegotiation of the incentive pay provision; (2) Schell’s contract had not been terminated without cause; and (8) Schell was not entitled to severance pay. The trial court traced Schell’s bad faith to the fact that his proposed modifications would have boosted his income to level higher than what it was before there was a change in the payer mix. LifeMark acted in bad faith, according to the trial court, because LifeMark did not do any research or computations regarding the effect the change in payer mix had on Schell’s income before concluding the change was insignificant.
Standard of Review
Appellate review of a bench is governed by
Murphy v. Carron,
Analysis
A. Renegotiation Term
The first issue is whether Life-Mark agreed to pay Schell severance pay if the negotiations between the two over Schell’s incentive pay floundered. Life-Mark and Schell agreed to renegotiate the incentive pay provision within 30 days of the anniversary date if the payer mix changed. While they agree that the payer mix changed, LifeMark first contended the change was insubstantial — though its CEO later testified that an eleven percent shift was substantial. Because their agreement did not require a substantial change only some, non-de minimis change 2 — the point is moot, making resolution of the meaning of “renegotiate” mandatory.
The trial court found the contract unambiguous — interpreting the renegotiation clause as requiring the parties to agree to a new incentive pay term that would stabilize Schell’s incentive compensation — but this finding was erroneous because there were two levels of ambiguity in the renegotiation clause. The goal of contract interpretation is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the contracting parties.
Butler v. Mitchell-Hugeback, Inc.,
Here, the context clarifies which meaning the parties intended.
See Sonoma Mgmt. Co. v. Boessen,
The contract requires the parties to “renegotiate” within 30 days of the annual anniversary.” If “renegotiate” only meant discuss in good faith, LifeMark could very well meet with Schell one day before the expiration of the thirty day period, with the honest desire to hammer out an agreement. If no agreement were forthcoming, LifeMark would not be in breach. This would border on the absurd. It is much more likely that failure to reach a modus vivendi would obligate LifeMark to pay severance pay, especially considering that Schell had sold LifeMark his practice in exchange for a four-year employment contract.
A sub-issue remains — whether an agreement to successfully renegotiate on unspecified terms is a mere “agreement to agree,” the mere concatenation of mutual illusory promises. An illusory promise is a promise to engage in behavior of an indefinite sort. Corbin on Contracts § 5.28. Because of the indefiniteness of the promised contractual undertaking, there is no way to (1) ascertain whether the parties have complied or (2) reasonably fix damages. Here, two things undermine the argument that the renegotiation clause is an illusory promise. First, the trend is against refusing to enforce promises on the grounds of indefiniteness. Id. Second, and more importantly, the reasons for refusing to enforce are not applicable. Whether the parties have reached an agreement on the incentive pay provision is a yes-or-no question. They did not. Fixing damages is also not a problem: The contract stipulates that failure to renegotiate, as termination without cause, kicks in the severance pay provision, which provides a definite formula for figuring out payments.
For the foregoing reasons, this court holds that the renegotiation clause required LifeMark and Schell to successfully renegotiate the incentive pay provision by the end of 30 days after the anniversary date in the event of a change in the payer mix.
B. Good Faith
While LifeMark had a contractual obligation to modify the incentive pay provision when the payer mix changed, bad faith on the part of Schell would relieve LifeMark of liability for failure to renegotiate the incentive pay provision because without a good faith attempt by Schell to deal with LifeMark any negotiation by LifeMark would be futile. In short, good faith negotiation by Schell was an implied-in-law condition precedent to LifeMark’s obligation to renegotiate the incentive pay clause.
See Deutsch v. Boatmen’s Nat. Bank of St. Louis,
There is much confusion surrounding the covenant of good faith. It is not a general reasonableness requirement.
6
See Rigby Corp. v. Boatmen’s Bank and Trust Co.,
Reasonableness does play a role in the good faith analysis — but only as evidence of subjective intent to undermine fulfillment of the contract.
8
Had Schell, for instance, demanded a blatantly unreasonable sum as incentive pay compensation, say, $10 million per year, the unreasonableness of the demand would be strong, perhaps even dispositive, evidence of the want of good faith. While good faith is not the same as reasonableness, it does require behavior on behalf of the parties that comports with the “reasonable expectations of the parties” but
only
in light of their
purposes
in contracting.
See Centronics Corp. v. Genicom Corp.,
Taking these observations in mind, this court is bound to reverse the trial court’s finding that Schell was in bad faith because his proposed changes in the formula for computing his incentive pay, if accept ed, would have resulted in a salary boost over what he was making before the change in payer mix. The trial court misread the doctrine of good faith. That Schell was attempting to improve his economic position by asking for a raise, as it were, does not necessarily mean he was in bad faith. On the contrary: Schell’s conduct indicated a commitment to renegotiating the incentive pay provision. He made the first overture, recommending a medical director stipend in lieu of the prior compensation provision — though the contract nowhere explicitly obliges him to notify LifeMark of the change in payer mix. He proposed basing incentive compensation on booked charges, which was rejected. He then proposed using RVUs as a substitute — even after the July 31st deadline had passed.
Respondent contends that Schell’s taking significant time off in December, which Schell admits caused a decline in income, indicates bad faith. The point is not germane. The question is not whether Schell breached his contract with LifeMark by taking excessive time off — LifeMark did not counterclaim — but rather whether Schell’s behavior
during negotiations
was
LifeMark argues that Schell’s so-called termination letter of September 1, 1996, put Schell in breach. Because LifeMark had already terminated Schell without cause, the contract had terminated, thus making Schell’s purported termination letter nugatory.
Because Schell engaged in good-faith negotiation, LifeMark was not relieved of its obligation to reach agreement with Schell. By not doing so by the end of July 31, 1996, LifeMark, per the terms of the contract, terminated Schell without cause and thus owed Schell severance pay, according to the formula set out in the contract. The trial court’s conclusion to the contrary was against the weight of the evidence.
The trial court’s judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded for the trial court to enter judgment in favor of Schell and to compute damages in accordance with § G of the contract’s additional provisions.
All concur.
Notes
. Unless indicated otherwise, all communication between LifeMark and Schell was via letters. Because the names of LifeMark’s
. Requiring renegotiation where the change was de minimis would be inefficient because the costs of negotiation itself would swamp any benefits Schell might reap from a successful renegotiation. An eleven percent drop in payer mix is not, however, de minimis — at least not under the facts of this case.
. The Fourth Circuit has handled a case similar to the one
sub judice
in
Curtis Bay Co. v. Mapco Coal, Inc.,
. For cases where the second meaning is used by the courts,
see In re 80 Nassau Assocs.,
. There is no carve-out for employment contracts.
See McKnight v. Midwest Eye Institute of Kansas City, Inc.,
. This is not to deny the existence of the tort of bad faith.
See State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Metcalf, by Wade,
. "In a business transaction both sides presumably tiy to get the best of the deal. That is the essence of bargaining and the free market. And in the context of this case, no legal rule bounds the run of business interest. So one cannot characterize self-interest as bad faith.”
Feldman v. Allegheny Int’l, Inc.,
. It must be noted that the default rule under the U.C.C. is that "good faith” means "hones-' ty in fact,” whether reasonable or not.
Consol. Public Water Supply Dist. No. C-1 v. Farmers Bank,
