Timothy Herremans, the appellant in this diversity damages suit for breach of contract and violations of Indiana’s wage payment statute, was employed by Carrera Designs (which paints recreational vehicles) as the manager of one of its plants. Until he was fired at the beginning of November of 1996, he received a salary plus a bonus equal to 45 percent of the plant’s (calendar) year-end before-tax profits. His suit seeks, in three separate counts (ordinarily a meaningless detail, but not here, as we are about to see): (1) $2,500 in statutory double damages (see
Fardy v. Physicians Health Rehabilitation Services, Inc.,
*1121
The dismissal of the $2,500 claim was erroi regardless of the correctness or incorrectness of the judge’s disposition of the other claims. The test for whether a case satisfies the amount in controversy requirement is whether the complaint makes a good-faith claim for the amount,
St. Paul Mercury Indemnity Co. v. Red Cab Co.,
It is true that
Shanaghan v. Cahill,
We agree with the district judge that Herremans’ claims for bonus do not come within the reach of the wage payment statute. The statutory term is “wages,” defined in another part of the statute as “all amounts at which the labor or service rendered is recompensed, whether the amount is fixed or ascertained on a time, task, piece, or commission basis, or in any other method of calculating such amount.” Ind.Code § 22-2-9-1 (b);
Licocci v. Cardinal Associates, Inc.,
This does not end the case, because Herremans argues that even if he is not entitled to the damages prescribed by the wage payment law, he is entitled to his actual damages for breach of a contractual entitlement to the bonuses. His bonus for 1995 was depressed by the failure of a major customer of the plant to pay its bills — thus underscoring our point that Herremans’ entitlement to bonus did not depend on just his own time and effort and product. Carerra decided that since the failure was not Herremans’ fault, the company would, though not contractually obligated to do so, pay him the additional bonus that he would have earned had it not been for the customer’s default. It promised to pay him the additional bonus in three equal annual installments and the promise was supported by consideration— Herremans’ promise to continue working for Carrera.
Carrera argues that since, as the record shows, Herremans intended to work for Carrera until his retirement, which was not due within the next three years, he gave up nothing by agreeing to continue working. But consideration is a formal rather than substantive requirement of the law of contracts. A promise is supported by consideration if it is formally conditioned on a promise by the promisee, even if the promisor would have carried out the promised undertaking without a reciprocal promise. E. Allan Farnsworth,
Farnsworth on Contracts
§ 2.10 (3d ed.1999);
Restatement (Second) of Contracts
§ 71, illustration 1 (1979). If X promises to go to work for Y, a successful investment advisor, at a salary of $40,000 a year, Y’s reciprocal promise of that salary is enforceable without inquiry into whether X, who let us say is independently wealthy, would have agreed to work for Y without any pay at all, perhaps for the experience or because he likes Y. To allow promisors’ motives to be dissected would disserve an important purpose of contract law — to minimize the occasions on which parties to contracts must submit themselves to the vagaries of juries. E.g.,
PMC, Inc. v. Sherwin-Williams Co.,
It is not as if Herremans had been contractually obligated to remain in Carrera’s employ; in that event, the promise of the bonus in exchange for his agreeing to stay on would have been a modification of the contract unsupported by consideration and so unenforceable. E.g.,
Hamlin v. Steward,
The district judge did not question the existence of consideration for Carrera’s promise to pay additional bonus in annual installments. But he ruled that enforcement was barred by the Indiana statute of frauds, which renders unenforceable contracts that cannot be completely performed within a year. Ind.Code § 32-2-1-1 Fifth;
Wior v. Anchor Industries, Inc.,
There is an exception for cases in which the application of the federal rule would interfere with substantial state interests,
Simmons v. City of Philadelphia,
The rule that forfeits an affirmative defense not pleaded in the answer (or by an earlier motion) is, we want to make clear, not to be applied rigidly. Often a change of circumstances will excuse a belated pleading of such a defense, as in our recent ease of
Baltimore & Ohio Terminal R.R. v. Wisconsin Central Limited,
So the dismissal of Count II, the 1995 bonus claim, must be reversed also; and we come last to the claim in Count III for a share of the 1996 profits of the plant that Herremans ceased to manage at the beginning of November of that year. The district judge dismissed this count without even alluding to its common law as distinct from statutory component.
Read literally, the employment contract between Herremans and Carrera would have allowed Carrera, in order to deprive Herre-mans of a bonus, to fire him on December 30, 1996. But especially since the contract was oral and thus left much to implicit understandings, as in
C.L. Maddox, Inc. v. Coalfield Services, Inc.,
Even so, says, Carrera, the plant’s profits for 1996 were zero, so Herremans is entitled to no bonus. But the record indicates that the plant was doing well in 1996 until Herremans was fired. If he was not fired for cause (an issue on which the record is opaque), and if the firing was in violation of an implied term of his employment contract and caused the loss of bonus that he would otherwise have earned, the principle that a person is not permitted to reap a legal benefit from his wrongful act would click in, and would bar Carrera from using the losses in the last two months to deprive Herremans of the bonus to which he was contractually entitled. In the law of contracts, the principle that no one is to be permitted to benefit from his wrongful act is a part of the doctrine of conditions and forbids a party to a contract to take an unjustified step to prevent the other party from performing his contractual undertaking and thus to precipitate that party into a breach.
Scott-Reitz Ltd. v. Rein Warsaw Associates,
To summarize, the district court’s judgment is affirmed insofar as it rejects the statutory claims in Counts II and III, but in all other respects is reversed, and the case is remanded to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Circuit Rule 36 shall apply on remand.
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND Remanded.
