ORDER
Before the court is defendant General Motor Corporation’s (“GMC”) motion for summary judgment. For the following reasons, the motion is granted.
FACTS
Prior to December 31,1989, plaintiff Don L. Seward (“Seward”) was employed by the B.O.C. (Buick, Oldsmobile, Cadillac) Division of General Motors Corporation. Seward had been employed by GMC since graduating from college with a bachelor’s degree in business administration in 1952, and since 1966, had worked in various management/supervisory positions. The final position held by Seward at GMC was that of a “shift superintendent,” who was responsible for approximately 430 people and the production of approximately $300,000 of salable product per shift. Seward received an annual salary of $64,020 as compensation for his employment.
*626 In November, 1986, GMC announced that by 1990 it would close the manufacturing plant at which Seward was employed, and that plant ceased production by July, 1989. In connection with the plant’s closing, GMC announced a Special Retirement Program whereby employees aged fifty-five through fifty-nine could elect to retire and receive special benefits. To receive these special benefits, eligible employees were required to sign an agreement entitled “Statement of Acceptance of Special Retirement” (the “Release”). Seward signed the Release on May 11, 1989, thereby agreeing to retire effective January 1, 1990. In the Release, Seward acknowledged that he was accepting GMC’s offer of special retirement “voluntarily with full knowledge of its significance, including the fact that by accepting it [he] waivefd] any claim in any way connected with [his] separation from employment with General Motors.” The Release further stated:
I acknowledge that no prior representations, promises or agreements relating to my employment and retirement have been made by General Motors which are contrary to this Agreement and that the special retirement offer and my acceptance of the special retirement offer constitute the entire and only agreement between me and General Motors.
In consideration of the terms of the special retirement offer, I hereby release and forever discharge General Motors and its officers, directors and employes for all claims, demands, and causes of action, known or unknown, which I may have based on the cessation of my employment at General Motors. This release specifically includes any possible claims I may have under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, the fair employment practice or civil rights law of Illinois, and any other federal, state, or local law, order, or regulation, or the common law relating to employment and any claims for breach of employment contract, either express or implied.
I further agree not to institute any proceedings against General Motors or its officers, directors, agents, employes, or stockholders, based on any matter relating to the cessation of my employment at General Motors, including, without limitation, actions under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act and the fair employment practice or civil rights law of Illinois.
Seward signed the Release, after having read the agreement, so that GMC would continue to . employ him through the plant closing date. In addition to signing the Release, Seward also signed a written calculation of his retirement benefits. Seward understood that the effect of signing this document was that he would be retired thereafter, and Seward retired as agreed. Once retired, Seward began receiving retirement benefits in excess of $36,000 annually. Additionally, because of his participation in the special retirement program, Seward received supplemental benefits of $953.22 per month from January 1, 1990 to September 30, 1990 and $976.61 per month from October 1, 1990 to his sixty-second birthday, July 6, 1992.
Prior to his retirement, six and a half weeks after reading and signing the Release, Seward attempted to revoke the Release. After speaking with at least two personnel administrators about his ability to revoke the Release, Seward submitted the following written statement:
I am not interested in voluntary retirement. I would prefer to continue my employment with General Motors.
Due to my age, years of service and few opportunities in my classification and there were several people in my classification who needed jobs and had no retirement option, I decided to sign the retirement sheet that was prepared for me to retire 1/1/90.
I have always indicated my desire to continue my employment with GM on the three surveys that were taken and on my goldenrod sheet for my annual review. During the next six months I want to be considered for comparable job openings, (dated June 26, 1989)
Seward tendered this letter to GMC personnel, but was nevertheless retired on De *627 cember 31, 1989. Shortly thereafter, Seward filed a charge of age discrimination with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which issued a Notice of Right to Sue on September 26, 1991. Subsequent to the EEOC’s issuance, Seward filed the instant action pursuant to the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA”), 29 U.S.C. § 621 et seq., alleging that the actual reason he was discharged was because of his age. Seward further claims that he was forced to retire and that GMC refused to place him in another position within the corporation, even though he was at least as qualified, if not more qualified, to assume positions that were awarded to younger managers who were trans-fered to other GMC plants. In response to Seward’s complaint, GMC has filed the present motion for summary judgment, asking the court to find that Seward waived his rights to such a claim by executing the Release or, alternatively, that even if the Release is otherwise invalid, Seward’s retention of the enhanced retirement benefits has ratified it, barring Seward’s claim.
DISCUSSION
Rule 56(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides that for a party to prevail on a summary judgment motion “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, [must] show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). Even though all reasonable inferences are drawn in favor of the party opposing the motion,
Beraha v. Baxter Health Care Corp.,
In response to GMC’s motion, Seward has attacked the validity of the Release as to waivers of claims under the ADEA. The United States Supreme Court has held that a plaintiff may waive a cause of action under Title YII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 by knowingly and voluntarily executing a release of claims,
Alexander v. Gardner-Denver Co.,
A contract is ambiguous when its contents are reasonably susceptible to more than one meaning.
White v. White,
*628
Despite the clarity of the Release, it will not be enforced and Seward may proceed with his age discrimination claim if Seward’s assent to the unambiguous language was not knowing and voluntary. The Seventh Circuit has defined the “knowing” requirement in the context of an ADEA release to mean executed purposefully, and not because of a mistake or accident.
Riley,
To establish a claim of compulsory duress under Illinois law sufficient to void a contract or release, a party must demonstrate that the duress left such party “bereft of the quality of mind essential to the making of a contract.”
Kaplan v. Kaplan,
Seward’s allegations, viewed in light of these principles, fall short of establishing grounds upon which to lay a claim of legal duress. Seward alleges that the purported duress was imposed in two ways: through GMC’s harassment of Seward in the above-mentioned manners and through the importunity of GMC’s administrative personnel. GMC’s actions were not threatening or wrongful. Furthermore, Seward’s own post-release correspondence with GMC is silent as to any allegations of duress, and instead, offers a valid explanation of why Seward executed the Release. 1 In *629 sum, GMC’s conduct was not of the nature, nor made under such circumstances, sufficient to cause Seward reasonably and adequately to lose control over his own free will. Resolving all facts in Seward’s favor, the court finds that Seward has failed to raise any issues of material fact to support his accusation of duress.
In addition to claiming duress, Seward has also asserted that he lacked assistance of counsel, thereby preventing the voluntary and knowing execution of the Release. Seward has submitted an affidavit that states that when he was given the Release to sign “neither [GMC personnel administrator] Meske nor anyone else employed by [GMC] gave [Seward] an opportunity to have the document reviewed by an attorney, nor did anyone suggest that [Seward] do any such thing. Additionally, [Seward] was given no opportunity ... to negotiate the terms contained in the [Release].” Representation and negotiation are not the
sine qua non
of an effective release.
Fortino v. Quasar Co.,
In addition to the arguments discussed above, Seward also contends that his belief that the Release did not bestow upon him any benefits other than those otherwise attributable to employees who were fifty-eight years-old with thirty years of service with GMC. Seward argues that he “could not have knowingly signed the *630 waiver if he did not know that he was receiving anything of value in exchange for his right to bring an action.” Seward does not argue that the release was in fact not supported by consideration; instead, Seward merely claims that he was mistaken as to the existence of consideration and the enforceability of the Release.
Seward’s alleged mistaken opinion of the legal effect of the release, however, cannot as a matter of law affect the enforceability of the release.
McCarthy v. McCarthy,
As a final attempt to demonstrate that the Release was not signed knowingly and voluntarily, Seward has identified certain statements made by a GMC personnel administrator (the “Administrator”) representing that the Release could be revoked at any time. Prior to signing the Release, Seward claims that he inquired as to his right to change his mind and revoke it, to which he allegedly received an affirmative answer. Seward contends that the Administrator told him that he could withdraw the Release whenever he so wished, and that the Administrator informed him of an instance in which another GMC employee had revoked his written intent to retire. Furthermore, Seward claims that the Administrator informed him that she needed to have all GMC employees “categorized” (i.e. identified as transferring, retiring, etc.) for an upcoming meeting with GMC officials and that all employees other than Seward had been categorized. Seward asserts that he executed the Release based on this information and that this information was false. Seward contends that material issues of fact exist as to whether he would have signed the release had he known that GMC’s statements were false.
In essence, Seward asserts that the Administrator’s alleged fraudulent statements induced his execution of the Release. In order to constitute fraudulent inducement, a representation: (1) must be one of material fact which has been made for the purpose of inducing the other party to act, (2) must be known by the maker to be false, but reasonably believed by the other party, and (3) must be relied upon by the other party and acted upon to his damage.
General Electric Credit Auto Lease, Inc. v. Jankuski,
Seward has implied that the Administrator’s alleged false representation
*631
that all other employees had been “categorized” somehow induced him to sign the Release. Even assuming that this statement was false and was made for the purpose of inducing Seward to act, such a statement is not, as a matter of law, a material fact upon which Seward could be justified in relying. The statement that all other employees in Seward’s situation had signed the Release is not a matter to which a reasonable person would attach importance in determining whether to execute the document in question.
See Buechin v. Ogden Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc.,
Seward asserts that the Administrator’s statement regarding the revocability of the Release was an agreement or promise that GMC would treat the Release as unilaterally revocable by Seward. The Release, however, acknowledged in simple clear language that no other promises were made and that the document constituted the entire and exclusive agreement. Seward, as signatory to the Release, was not at liberty to accept the Administrator’s pri- or representation, if made, that the Release could be rescinded at Seward’s request because Seward acknowledged in the Release that no other “representations, promises or agreements” relating to his retirement had been made.
See Hurley v. Frontier Ford Motors, Inc.,
In sum, Seward has asked the court to accept parol evidence of an alleged contractual right to unilateral rescission. Such a right would enable Seward to relieve himself of all obligations under the Release at his whim. Seward has not raised a genuine issue of fact that, with his college business education, years of supervisory experience, and real estate experience, he justifiably relied on this position when executing the Release. Because Seward has raised the alleged misrepresentations of the Administrator in an attempt to thwart GMC’s motion for summary judgment, he must demonstrate with more than a scintilla of evidence that material issues of genuine fact exist as to the validity of the Release.
Brownell,
In its motion for summary judgment, GMC argues that even if the execution of the Release was somehow defective, Seward’s failure to tender back to GMC the consideration he received in exchange for his waiver of claims constitutes a ratification of the Release. Such a ratification would render the Release enforceable, affording GMC the benefit of its bargain. In
Grillet v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
A party cannot be permitted to retain the benefits received under a contract and at the same time escape the obligations imposed by the contract. If a releasor, therefore, retains the consideration after learning that the release is voidable, her continued retention of the benefits constitutes a ratification of the release.
Even if Grillet’s release was tainted by misrepresentation, Grillet ratified the release by keeping its benefits for an unreasonably long period of time.
Id.
at 220-21 (citations omitted);
see also Cumberland & Ohio Co. v. First American Nat’l Bank,
The Fourth Circuit reached the same result in
O’Shea v. Commercial Credit Corp.,
[E]ven if the release executed by the [employee] was invalid, the [employer] would have prevailed on the ground that the [employee’s] subsequent acceptance of the severance pay demonstrated an intent to ratify the agreement. It is a well-established proposition that the retention of the benefits of a voidable contract may constitute ratification.
Id. at 362 (citations omitted).
The events that Seward claims invalidate the Release occurred prior to his retirement on January 1, 1990. Every month after his retirement until his sixty-second birthday, from January 1, 1990 to July 6, 1992, Seward accepted more than $900 in additional benefits from the Release, despite his apparent belief that the Release was invalid or had been revoked. Furthermore, Seward continued to accept enhanced monthly benefits even after initiating this
*633
suit in violation of the express terms of the Release. Through his actions, Seward has attempted to have his cake and eat it too. To avoid ratifying the Release through his conduct, Seward should have at least refused the additional retirement benefits once he learned of the alleged invalidity of the Release.
See Anselmo v. Manufacturers Life Ins. Co.,
Notwithstanding the logic of the Fifth and Fourth Circuits, Seward urges that court follow the holding of
Isaacs v. Caterpillar, Inc.,
Seward further requests that this court adopt the holdings reached in
Oberg v. Allied Van Lines,
No. 91 C 6576,
Seward validly waived his right to redress an alleged ADEA claim against GMC by his voluntary and knowing execution of the Release. At the time of the waiver, he had the quality of mind essential to making a contract. The court finds that Seward raises no issues of material fact which support allegations that the Release was not knowingly and voluntarily executed. Furthermore, even if Seward’s claims of fraud and duress were true, Seward nevertheless ratified the Release by keeping its benefits despite his awareness of the alleged cir *634 cumstances that purportedly rendered it invalid. The court does not hold that Seward, prior to initiating this suit, was obligated to tender back to GMC the supplemental retirement benefits which he received. Rather, the court holds that Seward, to avoid ratification of the Release, was obligated to tender back or refuse the benefits he received after he became aware of the alleged fraud and duress he now raises as a defense to the Release.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, GMC’s motion for summary judgment is granted.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Seward’s letter to Irene Meske (GMC personnel administrator) stated that he was signing the "retirement sheet” because of his age, his years of service, the lack of opportunities available to him, and because of the needs of younger employees lacking the retirement option to have jobs.
. In a footnote to its decision, the Sixth Circuit noted that Judge Hutchinson was unable to conclude on the record that the plaintiff needed a lawyer to advise him on the release’s possible effect on his ADEA retaliation claim.
. Seward is a registered real estate agent and, since 1984, has operated his own real estate business. Additionally, Seward had studied the law of contracts in connection with real estate. Defendant’s Rule 12(m) Statements of Fact at 2.
. Seward has submitted his own affidavit as an exhibit to his response to GMC’s motion. This affidavit, however, is silent as to any facts regarding the alleged fraud or deceit purported to be the inducement for Seward’s signature on the Release. Furthermore, in support of his allegation that the Release could be revoked at his will, Seward has submitted a copy of the letter he claims was delivered to GMC as a revocation of the Release. Despite Seward’s contention that this communication, delivered one and one-half months after the Release was signed, was a letter of revocation, the letter expressly states no more than Seward’s lack of interest in retire *632 ment, his preference for continued employment, his reasons for signing the Release, his history of expressing his desire to continue working for GMC, and his desire to be considered for appropriate jobs for the "next six months” (the period after which he was scheduled to retire). The letter makes no specific reference to an alleged right of revocation, nor does it specifically state, or even imply, that Seward unconditionally revoked the Release.
