Aftеr his employment was terminated at the Hazen Paper Company in June of 1986, Walter F. Biggins sued the company and the two individuals who owned and operated it, Robert Hazen and Thomas N. Hazen. In the district court Biggins obtained an amended judgment against the defendants in the amount of $1.78 million dollars. Both the defendants and the plaintiff appeal this judgment.
I. BACKGROUND
A. The Jury Verdict
The complaint alleged violations of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 621-634, and the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. § 1140. Pendent state law claims were also brought under Massachusetts tort and contract law and the Massachusetts Civil Rights Act (MCRA), Mass. Gen.L. ch. 12, §§ 11H and 111. The case was jury tried.
The jury, in answer to special interrogatories, rendered the following verdict on the federal claims. It found that defendants violated the ADEA and awarded Big-gins $560,775 in damages. It also found that the ADEA violation was willful. On Biggins’ ERISA claim, the jury found that defendants discharged the plaintiff in order to prevent his pension benefits from vesting. Biggins was awarded $100,000 in damages on the ERISA claim.
The jury found for the plaintiff on four Massachusetts law claims. First, on the wrongful discharge claim, the jury found that the defendants agreed to compensate Biggins by giving him shares of company stock, and that the defendants wrongfully discharged Biggins in order to deprive him of this promised stock compensation. The jury awarded plaintiff one dollar in compensatory damages on the wrongful discharge claim. The jury also found that the defendants committed fraud by failing to compensate Biggins with the stock he had been promised; it awarded him $315,098 in damages for the fraud. The jury further found that the plaintiff and the defendants had a contract other than of at-will employment, and that the defendants breached this employment contract when they discharged him. Biggins was awarded $266,-897 in compensatory damages on this claim. Finally, the jury found that the defendants violated the Massachusetts Civil Rights Act because they interfered with Biggins’ exercise of his civil rights through the use of threats, intimidation or coercion. The jury awarded Biggins one dollar in damages on this claim.
The jury was also asked to determine if Biggins was the inventor, developer, and sole rightful owner of a paper coating formula and method that was developed while he worked for the defendants. The jury found that he was not.
B. District Court Rulings on Post-Trial Motions
After the verdict, both the defendants and the plaintiff filed post-trial motions. Defendants filed a motion pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 50(b) for j.n.o.v. or, in the alternative, for a new trial. Defendants also moved to amend or alter the judgment pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e). Plaintiff moved for an award of costs and attorney’s fees under federal and state law. Plaintiff also requested that the district court enhance any award of attorney’s fees to an amount equal to one-third of the damages awarded.
The court ordered j.n.o.v. on the jury’s finding that the ADEA violation was will *1409 ful. That finding, if sustained, would have required an additional payment of liquidated damages equal to the amount of damages awarded for the ADEA violation. The court also ordered j.n.o.v. on the finding of a violation of the Massachusetts Civil Rights Act. In all other respects the court denied the defendants’ motion for j.n.o.v. or a new trial. The court also denied the defendants’ motion to alter or amend the judgment.
On plaintiff’s post-trial motions, the district court further ruled that Biggins was entitled to prejudgment interest “on his entire award because plaintiff is not entitled to liquidated damages.” The court granted plaintiff’s motion for attorney’s fees in the amount of $175,564.57 and for costs in the amount of $9,760.07. It declined to enhance the award of attorney’s fees.
C. The Issues on Appeal
The defendants raise three issues on appeal: (1) whether the district court erred in denying their motions for directed verdict and j.n.o.v. on all the claims submitted to the jury; (2) whether the district court erred in denying the defendants’ motion to alter or amend the judgment because the damages awarded were excessive, duplica-tive, and unsupported by the evidence and because the award of prejudgment interest was erroneous as a matter of law; and (3) whether the district court erred in denying defendants’ motion for a new trial because the verdict was against the clear weight of the evidence.
Biggins raises three issues on cross-appeal: (1) whether the court erred in granting j.n.o.v. on the jury’s finding that the ADEA violation was willful; (2) whether the court erred in granting j.n.o.v. on the Massachusetts Civil Rights Act claim; and (3) whether the court erred by applying the wrong standard in determining the amount of attorney’s fees and expenses to be awarded plaintiff.
We apply the same standard of review to the district court’s grant or denial of motions for directed verdict and j.n.o.v.
See Veranda Beach Club Ltd. Partnership v. Western Sur. Co.,
The district court may grant judgment notwithstanding the verdict “only after a determination that the evidence could lead a reasonable person to only one conclusion,” ... namely, that the moving party was entitled to judgment^] ...
The district court “may not consider the credibility of witnesses, resolve conflicts in testimony, or evaluate the weight of the evidence.” The trial court is “compelled, therefore, even in a close case, to uphold the verdict unless the facts and inferences, when viewed in the light most favorable to the party for whom the jury held, point so strongly and overwhelmingly in favor of the mov-ant that a reasonable jury could not have arrived at this conclusion.”
Id. at 214 (citations omitted). We review the evidence in our discussion of the issues.
II. THE ADEA CLAIM
A. Sufficiency of the Evidence
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
*1410
There is no doubt that plaintiff here made out a prima facie case of age discrimination. He was within the protected age group. He was sixty-two years old at the time of his termination. He was performing his work at a level that met his employer’s legitimate expectations. And he was replaced by someone younger than himself with roughly similar qualifications.
See Mesnick v. General Elec. Co.,
In
Connell v. Bank of Boston,
[i]f a prima facie case is made, the burden shifts to the employer to articulate some legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for plaintiffs discharge. The articulation of such a reason nullifies the inference raised by the prima facie case. Plaintiff must then clear the second hurdle by showing that the employer’s articulated reasons were only a pretext for age discrimination. The plaintiff is required to “do more than simply refute or cast doubt,” on the employer’s rationale. He must “also show a discriminatory animus based on age.” The key question becomes whether the employer fired plaintiff because of his age. We do not second-guess the business decisions of an employer.
Connell,
In order to understand the ADEA evidence we must first outline the evidentiary contours of the case. Hazen Paper Company is a small and successful business located in Holyoke, Massachusetts. It is privately owned and operated by two cousins, Robert Hazen and Thomas N. Hazen. Robert Hazen is the company’s president and Thomas Hazen is its treasurer. The company is engaged in the manufacture of coated, foil laminated, and printed paper and paperboard for use in such products as cosmetic wrap, lottery tickets, and pressure sensitive items. It is known as a рaper converter.
Biggins was hired by Hazen Paper in 1977 as its first technical director. There was no written employment contract. Big-gins was fifty-two years old when he was hired. He held a Bachelor’s degree and a Master’s degree in chemistry and had spent his prior work life as a technician-chemist in the paper industry.
Biggins worked for Hazen Paper for over nine and one-half years. One of the problems that Hazen Paper and the paper converter industry faced at the time Big-gins started his employment was the elimination of hazardous emissions from the nitrocellulose and vinyl coatings then in general use. The elimination of such emissions was mandated by the Clean Air Act. Biggins developed a water-based paper coating that both exceeded the requirements of applicable environmental laws and resulted in a superior product in terms of gloss and durability.
By the mid-1980s that coating, referred to at trial as “Biggins Acrylic,” was widely used by Hazen Paper. The company’s sales increased substantially as a result of the use of the coating developed by Big-gins. In 1983 Biggins became aware of this increase in sales and of the fact that the commissions of one of its sales representatives, Robert Hutchinson, had increased dramatically (to over $200,000). Because he felt that these sales commission were being made on “something that I had developed,” Biggins sought an increase in pay from the company. After a meeting in 1983 with Thomas and Robert Hazen, Biggins’ salary was increased by ten percent.
Biggins, however, remained dissatisfied with his compensation. In 1984, Biggins again sought an increase in his salary, which by this time was $44,000. Biggins testified that in July of 1984 he approached Thomas Hazen to tell Hazen that he wanted a raise and that he thought he was *1411 worth $100,000 to the company. According to Biggins, Hazen told him that “nobody in the company” was being paid that amount and that Hazen could not give him a salary increase to $100,000. Biggins testified that Hazen nonetheless indicated that “he would be willing to give me a piece of the company in stock, and that ... my fortune could increase as the fortunes of the company did.” Biggins also stated that Hazen said that he was prepared to “mak[e] up the difference between my salary and $100,000 in stock.” Thomas Hazen denied emphatically that he promised to give Big-gins any stock.
While Biggins was working for Hazen Paper, he also was involved in two private business ventures with his son. One had to do with cleaning up hazardous wastes and recovering dirty solvents produced by automobile repair shops and paper companies. The other venture was a consulting business in the environmental/regulatory compliance area, which involved explaining to small businesses what was required under applicable regulations. When Thomas Hazen learned of the clean-up business, he concluded that Biggins had taken personal advantage of his employment at the company and that there was a great risk of Biggins disclosing company secrets to its competitors. Thomas Hazen and his cousin, Robert, told Biggins that this activity was “outrageous.” Thomas Hazen had a confidentiality agreement drawn up which restricted Biggins’ outside activities during his еmployment and for a limited time after his employment ceased. Biggins indicated he would sign the agreement if he was given a raise, but Thomas Hazen would not agree to this. He told Biggins that unless he signed the agreement as it stood, his employment would be terminated. Biggins refused to do so and his employment with Hazen Paper ceased on June 13, 1986. At the time Biggins was terminated, his pension rights, which were worth about $93,-000, had not vested. They would, however, have vested a few weeks later if Biggins had not been fired.
We now turn to the evidence bearing directly on the ADEA claim. Biggins testified that both Robert and Thomas Hazen made critical comments about his age. On one occasion, Robert Hazen took out a membership for company employees in a handball court in Holyoke. At that time he told Biggins and another employee, who was a year older than Biggins, that it would not do them much good because they were “so old.” On another occasion, Thomas Hazen reminded Biggins that it was costing the company a lot more for his life insurance policy because he was “so old.”
The most significant evidence on the ADEA claim comes from the facts and circumstances surrounding the termination of Biggins’ employment. Biggins was asked by Thomas Hazen to sign a confidentiality agreement in the spring of 1986 because, according to Hazen, he felt that Biggins’s outside business venture was improper and a threat to the company. Negotiations relative to Biggins signing the confidentiality agreement continued for weeks, during which time Biggins stated repeatedly that he would not sign the agreement unless his remuneration was increased. Thomas Hazen brought matters to a head by telling Biggins on June 13, 1986, that there would be no pay increase, and unless he signed the agreement, he would be fired. Biggins refused to do so and his employment was terminated on that date.
Defendants hired a younger man to replace plaintiff, one Timothy McDonald. A confidentiality agreement was given to McDonald. It provided for 100 days separation pay. By contrast, the confidentiality agreement offered Biggins, had no such provision for severance pay. McDonald’s agreement also contained a six-month non-competition clause. In the agreement tendered the plaintiff, the non-competition clause was for two years.
As of June 13, 1986, Biggins had worked for the defendants for more than nine and one-half years. He was sixty-two years old. It is uncontradicted that had Biggins worked for the company a few more weeks, his right to a pension would have vested. There was uncontradicted evidence that at the time of Biggins’ termination no one else in the company was subject to a confidentiality agreement.
*1412 There was additional testimony that when Thomas Hazen was told by Biggins that he would not sign the confidentiality agreement unless it was accompanied by an increase in remuneration, Hazen suggested Biggins become a cqnsultant to the company. Biggins would then no longer have been an employee of the company and would have lost his rights to all employee benefits. Finally, Thomas Hazen testified that he was "absolutely" aware that age discrimination was illegal.
Based on the foregoing evidenсe, the jury could reasonably have found that Thomas Hazen decided to fire Biggins before his pension rights vested and used the confidentiality agreement as a means to that end. The jury could also have reasonably found that age was inextricably intertwined with the decision to fire Biggins. If it were not for Biggins' age, sixty-two, his pension rights would not have been within a hairbreadth of vesting. Biggins was fifty-two years old when he was hired; his pension rights vested in ten years.
Based on our review of the evidence, we find that it was within the province of the jury to decide whether age was a determining factor in the defendants' decision to terminate Biggins' employment.
B. Was There a Willful Violation of the ADEA?
The enforcement section of the ADEA contains the following provision: "Provided, That liquidated damages shall be payable only in cases of willful violations of this chapter." 29 U.S.C. § 626(b). The ADEA, in § 626(b), adopts the definition of liquidated damages established in the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C. § 216(b). Liquidated damages are defined as an amount equal to the pecuniary losses suffered by the discharged employee by way of lost wages, salary increases and other benefits. See Air Line Pilots Ass'n, Int'l v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,
In reviewing the Trans World Airlines case, which focused on the application of a company-wide plan or policy, the Supreme Court held that an acceptable definition of "willful violation" was the one used by the Second Circuit: "[A] violation is `willful' if `the employer either knew or showed reckless disregard for the matter of whether its conduct was prohibited by the ADEA.'" Thurston,
Courts below have held that an employer's action may be "willful," within the meaning of § 16(a) of the FLSA, even though he did not have an evil motive or bad purpose. We do not agree with TWA's argument that unless it intended to violate the Act, double damages are inappropriate under § 7(b) of the ADEA. Only one Court of Appeals has expressed approval of this position. See Loeb v. Textron, Inc.,600 F.2d 1003 , 1020, n. 27 (CAl 1979).
Id. at 126 n. 19,
In a subsequent Fair Labor Standards Act case the Court reaffirmed the definition of a willful violation enunciated in Thurston. "The standard of willfulness that was adopted in Thurston-that the employer either knew or showed reckless disregard for the matter of whether its conduct was prohibited by the statute-is surely a fair reading of the plain language of the Act." McLaughlin v. Richland Shoe Co.,
As already noted, Thurston involved the application of a company policy to a group of employees. The courts of appeals have had some trouble fitting the Thu rston standard of willfulness to disparate treatment cases. As a result the circuits have arrived at differing interpretations and modifications of Thurston. We, therefore, *1413 turn to a review of the relevant cases before attempting to formulate our own definition of willfulness in a disparate treatment case.
The Second Circuit has taken a “continuum” approach.
In light of Thurston, we think that “willfulness” is most easily understood when the term is analyzed along a continuum. Using that concept, at one extreme there is no liability for liquidated damages when a plaintiff proves only that the employer acted negligently, inadvertently, innocently, or even, if the employer was aware of the applicability of the ADEA, and acted reasonably and in good faith. See McLaughlin,108 S.Ct. at 1681-82 . The opposite point of the spectrum is revealed when a plaintiff establishes that the employer had an evil motive: such showing is sufficient for double damages, but is not necessary for an award of liquidated damages. See Thurston,469 U.S. at 126 n. 17,105 S.Ct. at 624 n. 17. Thus, in the middle of the spectrum, double damages may properly be awarded when the proof shows that an employer was indifferent to the requirements of the governing statute and acted in a purposeful, deliberate, or calculated fashion.
Benjamin v. United Merchants and Mfrs. Inc.,
The Third Circuit has added a requirement of “outrageous conduct” to the Thur-ston factors:
Where an employer makes a decision such as termination of an employee because of age, the employer will or should have known that the conduct violated the Act. Nonetheless, in order that the liquidated damages be based on evidence that does not merely duplicate that needed for the compensatory damages, there must be some additional evidence of outrageous conduct.
Dreyer v. Arco Chemical Co., Div. of Atlantic Richfield Co.,
In
Taylor v. Home Insurance Company,
The Fifth Circuit has interpreted Thur-ston to mean that “good faith” is no longer a valid defense to a willfulness claim:
Under the Thurston rule, however, “good faith” can no longer coexist with “willfulness.” The result is that only “knowing” or “reckless” violations of the ADEA are subject to liquidated damages. Thus, a further examination of good faith becomes irrelevant because it has already been factored into the Thurston “willfulness” definition.
Powell v. Rockwell Int’l Corp.,
The Supreme Court has held that liquidated damages are a punitive sanction and should be reserved for the most egregious violations of the ADEA. Liquidated damages should not be awarded unless the defendant acted knowingly or recklessly.
The evidence is this case was weak. There is simply no evidence that Pepsi’s actions were so egregious as to justify finding a willful violation. Pepsi was entitled to judgment on this issue.
Id. at 1470 (citations omitted).
In
Schrand v. Federal Pacific Electric Co.,
The Seventh Circuit follows
Thurston’s
knowing or reckless disregard definition.
Brown v. M & M/Mars,
The Eighth Circuit applies the Thurston standard as follows:
We think Thurston means at least this: if the people making the employment decision know that age discrimination is unlawful, and if there is direct evidence — more than just an inference from, say, an arguably pretextual justification — of age-based animus, the trier of fact may properly find willfulness.
Neufeld v. Searle Lab.,
The Ninth Circuit follows the
Thurston
standard unadorned and has applied it retroactively.
Gilchrist v. Jim Slemons Imports, Inc.,
The Tenth Circuit, after a careful analysis of Thurston and a survey of the standards adopted in other circuits, held:
Under the standard we adoрt today, a basic finding of liability under the Act requires that age be at least one of possibly several “determinative factors” in the employer’s conduct; for a willful violation to exist in a disparate treatment claim, a factfinder must find that age was the predominant factor in the employer’s decision.
Cooper v. Asplundh Tree Expert Co.,
The Eleventh Circuit follows
Thurston
without qualification.
Formby v. Farmers & Merchants Bank,
Finally, we turn to our own circuit.
Loeb v. Textron Inc.,
In Loeb, after discussing the jury instructions on application of the McDonnell Douglas formula to an ADEA violation claim, we adopted the following standard governing proof of an ADEA violation:
We do not quarrel with the court’s statement that age did not have to be the sole factor motivating defendants to act; we do think, however, that the court should have instructed the jury that for plaintiff to prevail he had to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that his age was the “determining factor” in his discharge in the sense that, “but for” his employer’s motive to discriminate against him because of age, he would not have been discharged.
Loeb,
In this circuit, the “determining factor” ingredient added by the Sixth and Tenth Circuits to the Thurston standard for proof of a “willful” violation of ADEA in disparate treatment cases is already a basic requirement for proof of the underlying ADEA violation itself.
*1415 With due respect, we cannot accept the Third Circuit’s outrageous conduct requirement. This seems to us to fly in the face of Thurston, and we find the term “outrageous” simply too amorphous to be of assistance in determining whаt constitutes a willful violation.
We, therefore, adopt, without modification or qualification, the
Thurston
test for willfulness: “a violation is ‘willful’ if ‘the employer either knew or showed reckless disregard for the matter of whether its conduct was prohibited by the ADEA.’ ”
Thurston,
We now apply the standard to this case. The principal owner of the company, Thomas Hazen, testified that he was “absolutely” aware that age discrimination was illegal. This is as strong evidence of a knowing violation of ADEA as a plaintiff could wish. In his charge to the jury, the district judge instructed that “age must have been the determining factor” in plaintiff’s discharge for the defendant’s to be found liable. This was in accord with the rule of this circuit. The court’s instruction on willfulness was as follows:
I will now instruct you on the meaning of willfulness.
Under Federal law, an act is done willfully if done voluntarily and intentionally, and with a specific intent to do something the law forbids.
You may find that Defendants willfully violated the age discrimination law if you find that one, that Defendants knew of or showed reckless disregard for, the law prohibiting age discrimination.
And two, that Defendants, with bad purpose, intentionally disobeyed or ignored the law.
In sum, if you find in Plaintiff’s favor on the age discrimination claim, you must also decide whether the Plaintiff proved by a preponderance of the evidence that the violation was willful. You should not award any damages for the willfulness of the violation itself. You need only decide whether the violation of the age discrimination law is willful.
This instruction went further then necessary because the “bad purpose” requirement established by this circuit in
Loeb
was eliminated by
Thurston.
Because the jury nonetheless found in plaintiff’s -favor, however, the error was harmless. The jury’s finding of a willful violation of the ADEA had a solid evidentiary foundation and was in accord with jury instructions that correctly stated the applicable law except as to the requirement of “bad purpose.” It was error for the district court to grant defendants’ motion for j.n.o.v. on this count. The finding by the jury that there was a willful violation is reinstated.
C. Damages Under the ADEA
We next address the defendants’ claim that the ADEA damages award was excessive, duplicative, and contrary to the evidence. Plaintiff suggests that defendants are foreclosed from raising this issue now because it was not raised below. Our review of the record discloses that, although it was not raised as explicitly below as it is here, it was argued sufficiently in defendants’ post-trial motions so that the court was aware of its contours and implications. See Memorandum and Order, Biggins v. Hazen Paper Company, No. 88-00225-F, slip. op. at 35-36 (D.Mass. filed April 5, 1991).
Ruling on the defendants’ motion for a new trial, the district court stated:
It is uncontested that plaintiff alleged total damages in the amount of $1,375,-614.12. Plaintiff offered the testimony *1416 of Dr. Moore and Mr. Moriarty in support of that allegation, and their testimony was unrefuted. It is also true that the jury awarded a total of $1,242,772.00 in damages on all seven counts, somе $132,842 less than the damages claimed by plaintiff. Because the jury did not select for total damages a figure higher than that alleged by plaintiff and evidenced in the record, the Court will not set aside any portion of the verdict on this basis.
Id. at 36 (citations omitted). We think the ruling contained in the last sentence of this order was error. Damages should not have been treated on an across-the-board basis. The jury was instructed on damages count by count and returned an award on each count separately. The damages awarded on each count should have been examined separately, not as a lump sum. This is particularly so in an ADEA award because liquidated damages always loom over the award.
Defendants argue that the evidence established that plaintiff’s pretrial losses for the ADEA violation totalled $419,454.38 and that the award of $560,775.00 was excessive by the amount of $141,320.62. Plaintiff counters that there was evidence from which the jury could have awarded damages in excess of $650,000.
Plaintiff put in evidence, as exhibit 21, a document entitled “Summary of Loss.” It was in effect a summary and condensation of the testimony of the two expert witnesses on damages who testified on behalf of plaintiff. The damages to which plaintiff was entitled for the ADEA violation were as follows: cash loss — $234,841.55; bonus loss — $131,275.88; lost benefits — $53,-336.95. These sums totalled $419,454.38. This was all for which there was evidentia-ry support. 2
The jury award of $560,775 is reduced to $419,454.38. Because we have found that there was a willful violation of the ADEA, plaintiff is entitled to liquidated damages equivalent to the amount. Damages on the ADEA count, therefore, amount to $838,-908.76.
III. THE ERISA CLAIM
Defendants argue that the jury verdict finding liability under ERISA was erroneous as a matter of law because there was no evidence to support a reasonable finding that plaintiff was discharged with the specific intent of interfering with his pension vesting. We need not linger long on this issue. Plaintiff was discharged within weeks before the vesting of his pension. Although plaintiff was fired ostensibly because he refused to sign the confidentiality agreement, the jury could have found that the real reason was to deprive him of his pension benefits. The jury was entitled to draw reasonable inferences from the proximity of the date of firing and the date of vesting of plaintiff’s pension.
We agree with the defendants that there should be a remittitur on the jury award of $100,000, but not of $30,000. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, the jury could have found that he was deprived of pension funds worth $93,000. There is no basis in the record for an amount greater than that. There must, therefore, be a remittitur on this count of $7,000.
IV. MASSACHUSETTS LAW CLAIMS
The defendants also challenge the district court’s denial of their motions for directed verdict and j.n.o.v. on three of the Massachusetts law claims, contending that the evidence could not reasonably have permitted the jury to find in favor of Biggins. Specifically, the appellants challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain findings of liability against them under Massachusetts law for (1) wrongful discharge; (2) common law fraud; and (3) breach of a contract embodied in the Hazen Paper *1417 Company’s 1980 Employee Handbook. On cross-appeal, Biggins contests the district court’s grant of j.n.o.v. reversing the jury’s finding of liability against the defendants under the Massachusetts Civil Rights Act. We apply the same de novo standard of review on the state law claims as we did on the federal claims.
A. Wrongful Discharge
Count IV of the complaint charged the defendants with “wrongful discharge” of Biggins in violation of Massachusetts law governing the termination of at-will employment. In
Fortune v. National Cash Register Co.,
In
Cort
and
Gram,
the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court found that an “employer’s predatory motivation ... can be classified as a reason contrary to public policy.”
Cort,
the obligation of good faith and fair dealing imposed on an employer requires that the employer be liable for the loss of compensation that is so clearly related to an employee’s past service, when the employee is discharged without good cause.
Gram,
contrived to despoil an employee of earned commission or similar compensa-tion due for past services_ That the plaintiff was fired arbitrarily and was injured in her expectations of future wages or other future emoluments does not, without more, encompass the For tune-type of liability, however meretricious we may consider the dismissal to have been.
Tenedios,
In the instant case, the jury found that the defendants had agreed in 1984 to compensate Biggins with shares of Hazen Paper Company Stock. It also found that the defendants wrongfully discharged Biggins in 1986 in order to deprive him of the promised stock compensation. The jury awarded one dollar in compensatory damages. In motions for directed verdict and j.n.o.v., the defendants attacked the legal sufficiency of the evidence to support a finding of wrongful discharge. In both motions, they insisted that the promise of stock to Biggins was not an enforceable contract. They argued that a contract could not have been formed because Big-gins did not own the formula for the acrylic process which he allegedly used as the bargaining chip for the stock. Lack of ownership of the rights to that formula meant that Biggins could not have given any consideration in return for the promise of stock. Consequently, the defendants claimed that because there was no consideration for the alleged stoсk agreement, there was no enforceable contract for the payment of stock, and therefore no depri *1418 vation of past .“compensation” already earned within the meaning of Fortune and its progeny.
The district court rejected these arguments, holding that Biggins provided “ample consideration” for the alleged stock agreement — namely, “the present and continued satisfactory performance of services for Hazen Paper Company.” The court noted that the jury’s rejection of Biggins’ claim of ownership of the acrylic formula precluded argument by Biggins that his ownership of the formula constituted valid consideration for the stock promise. Nonetheless, the court concluded that Biggins’ continued service as an employee of the company subsequent to the alleged stock promise would in and of itself constitute adequate consideration for any stock agreement.
On appeal, the defendants renew the argument that the evidence was legally insufficient to establish that Thomas Hazen’s promise of stock to Biggins in 1984 was earned, contractually-established “compensation.” They insist that there can be no Foriwwe-based claim because Biggins failed to establish any contractual expectancy that was in fact defeated by reason of his discharge from employment.
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, we find that the district court correctly concluded that there was adequate evidence to support the jury’s finding that consideration sufficient to support аn agreement for “compensation” inhered in Biggins” continued performance of services for the Hazen Paper Company. Biggins testified that when he reqúested a raise in his annual compensation in 1984, Thomas Hazen promised to give him stock worth the difference- between his pre-existing $44,000 annual compensation and a $100,-000 annual compensation level. The jury could have found that Biggins’ decision to continue as an employee with Hazen Paper was consideration for an agreement to increase his annual compensation.
See Jackson v. Action for Boston Community Dev., Inc.,
We find unavailing appellants’ continued insistence that any promise of stock by Thomas Hazen to Biggins could never have constituted an enforceable contract.
3
The appellants renew the argument made below that any offer of stock by Thomas Hazen which did not specify the quantity or class of stock promised, or the time of its delivery to Biggins, would lack the requisite definiteness to be enforced as a contract. We think that the issue of whether Thomas Hazen’s alleged offer of stock was sufficiently definite was a question of fact, which the jury could properly resolve in favor of Biggins.
See, e.g., Rizzo v. Cunningham,
Because the jury could have determined that Hazen’s promise of stock was an enforceable oral contract properly supported by consideration, we see little merit in the appellants’ other arguments challenging the adequacy of proof of various elements necessary for Biggins to make out his wrongful discharge claim. The defendants insist that the promise of stock was ambiguous as to the time of its delivery and that any “compensation” due Big-gins was “future” rather than “past” earnings — and therefore not properly recoverable under the
Fortune
doctrine. This argument is without merit. If Biggins was promised stock in 1984 sufficient to raise his overall annual compensation to $100,-000, the jury had ample evidence to determine that his discharge from Hazen Paper Company in 1986, without delivery of the promised stock, was a deprivation of “past” earnings. Equally lacking in merit is appellants’ argument that Biggins’ discharge in 1986 did not directly cause him to forfeit the promised stock. We can see no distinction between the situation of an employee whose discharge is intended by his employer to deprive him of previously earned wages or sales commissions, and that of an employee discharged by his employer in order to deprive him of stock promised as supplemental annual compensation. A jury could in both instances find that this discharge was “contrived to despoil an employee of earned commission or similar compensation due for past servic-es_” Te
nedios,
B. Common Law Fraud
Defendants next attack the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the jury’s verdict awarding $315,098 in damages on Big-gins’ claim of common law fraud. The defendants contend that the district court improperly denied its motions for directed verdict and j.n.o.v. because the evidence did not sufficiently establish certain of the elements necessary to sustain a fraud claim under Massachusetts law. As we observed in one such case under Massachusetts common law,
the standard for setting aside a jury verdict is a rigorous one.... [W]e must find that no jury could reasonably find that all five elements of common law fraud were met with respect to the alleged misrepresentation and omissions. These elements are: (1) that the statement was knowingly false; (2) that [the defendant] made the false statement with intent to deceive; (3) that the statement was material to the plaintiffs’ decision to [enter] the contract; (4) that the plaintiffs reasonably relied on the statement; and (5) that the plaintiffs were injured as a result of their reliance.
Turner v. Johnson & Johnson,
The defendants’ principal contention on appeal is that the evidence was not sufficient to establish that Biggins relied on the stock promise to his detriment and thereby suffered damages as a result of his remaining as an employee at Hazen Paper. 6 The *1420 defendants insist that Biggins offered no evidence to show that he gave up other employment opportunities as a result of the promise of the stock, or that he remained at Hazen Paper after 1984 because of the promise. The defendants also challenge the district court’s denial of j.n.o.v. on their argument that the detrimental reliance element was lacking. They argue that the district court misconstrued Massachusetts law when it held that Biggins had satisfied the detrimental reliance element by the simple fact of his remaining as an employee of the company subsequent to the stock promise.
Proof of detrimental reliance is a necessary element of a fraud claim under Massachusetts law.
See McEvoy Travel Bureau, Inc. v. Norton Co.,
The district court’s denial of j.n.o.v. rested on the finding that Biggins’ “rendition of present and continuing services at Hazen Paper Company provide[d] the legal detriment for the fraud claim.” That conclusion, in turn, relied on the assumption that under Massachusetts law, Big-gins’ continued services “in exchange for the stock promise [was] sufficiеnt to provide ‘detrimental reliance.’ ” After review of the applicable case law, we hold that the district court correctly interpreted Massachusetts law when it concluded that under the circumstances Biggins’ continued employment was a legally sufficient form of detrimental reliance that could have supported the jury’s verdict.
Massachusetts law recognizes that an affirmative act by the victim of fraudulent conduct is not required to establish the element of detrimental reliance:
It is the settled law of this Commonwealth in actions for deceit ... that the representations need not be the sole or predominating motive that induced the victim to part with his money or property, but that it is enough if they alone or with other causes materially influenced him to take the particular action that the wrongdoer intended he should take as a result of such representations and that otherwise he would not have taken such action.
National Shawmut Bank v. Johnson,
Here, as discussed
supra,
the jury could properly have found that Biggins and the defendants entered into an enforceable agreement for the payment of stock compensation. Both employer and employee were therefore subject to a requirement that “parties to contracts, whether experienced in business or not, should deal with each other honestly, and ... should not be permitted to engage in fraud to induce the contract.”
McEvoy Travel Bureau,
The jury heard evidence that Big-gins approached Thomas Hazen in 1984 with a demand for additional compensation that would raise his salary to an annual rate of $100,000. The jury could have inferred that this demand was an implicit threat by Biggins that he would not otherwise continue in his job. There was further evidence to support the conclusion that as a result of a promise of stоck, Biggins remained at the company and referred to his son certain business opportunities that became available to him. A jury could have determined that Biggins, who was fifty-nine years old at the time of the stock agreement, decided as a result of the promise of stock to forego any attempt to seek alternative (or independent) employment during the remainder of his career. The jury could have found damages for this forbearance based on the difference between Biggins’ salary and the promised stock compensation that would have raised his annual salary to $100,000.
Based on this evidence and our reading of Massachusetts law, we conclude that the district court correctly denied the defendants’ directed verdict and j.n.o.v. motions.
C. Breach of Contract
Defendants’ next attack on the jury’s verdict focusses on the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain Biggins’ claim that the defendants breached a contract embodied in the Hazen Paper Company’s 1980 Employee Handbook. The jury found that either an express or implied employment contract existed between Biggins and the Hazen Paper Company. It also found that the Employee Handbook constituted a part of this contract and that this contract was breached at the time of Biggins’ termination. The jury awarded compensatory damages of $266,897. The district court subsequently denied directed verdict and j.n.o.v. motions that challenged both the sufficiency of the evidence establishing the existence of a contract other than at-will employment and the sufficiency of proof of damages flowing from the breach of that contract.
The parties agree that the controlling authority under Massachusetts law is
Jackson v. Action for Boston Community
*1422
Development, Inc.,
In this case, ... the most that can be said in his behalf is that he received the manual at some unknown time and continued to work for the defendant there-after_
[O]n review of all the circumstances here, ... the conclusion is inexorable that no implied contract based on the personnel manual’s terms existed. It is undisputed that the defendant retained the right to modify unilaterally the personnel manual’s terms. This tends to show that any “offer” made by the defendant in distributing the manual was illusory. The personnel manual’s language that it is provided for “guidance” as to the defendant’s “policies” is of the same import. It is also significant that nothing in the circumstances here reveals any negotiation over the terms of the personnel manual. Furthermore, consistent with employment at will, no term of employment was stated in the personnel manual. The plaintiff does not argue that any special attention was callеd to the manual by the defendant; there is no indication that the plaintiff signed the manual, or in any way manifested his assent to it or acknowledged that he understood its terms.
Id.
The evidence showed that Biggins was hired by Hazen Paper in 1977. Biggins testified that at some point thereafter he acquired a copy of the company’s 1980 Employee Handbook. Biggins stated that he tried to take a vacation in May of 1986, a month prior to his discharge from the company, but was refused permission by Thomas Hazen. He testified that after his termination the company refused to pay him for other accrued vacation time. Biggins said that he understood that the company had a policy of not paying employees for vacation time off, and that he learned of this policy from the 1980 Employee Handbook. He also declared that he had learned about this policy from a letter sent him after his termination by Hazen Paper’s attorney, in which Biggins thought the attorney had quoted “verbatim” those portions of the Employee Handbook that described Hazen Paper’s vacation policy.
The 1980 Employee Handboоk established other personnel policies apart from the vacation policy. As part of a section entitled “The Policies You Enjoy as an Employee of Hazen Paper Company,” the Handbook specified that employees would have to pass through a ninety day “get-acquainted period” in order to become “regular” employees. In a subsection titled “Job Security,” the Handbook provided that
When employees do not fulfill the Company’s standards, they are counselled and told how to be an acceptable employee. Only those who jeopardize customer relations through outlandish gross violations of standards or failure to respond to repeated counselling are separated.
On the topic of discipline of employees, the Handbook had a section entitled “What is expected of you as an employee of Hazen Paper Company,” which provided that
When discipline becomes necessary because of a violation of Hazen Paper Company’s rules, we have the responsibility to ensure that such discipline is fair and *1423 consistent. To provide for this treatment, the following factors will be considered:
1) The seriousness of the offense;
2) The circumstances surrounding the incident;
3) Your past record;
4) The Company’s past practice.
Generally, any discipline will start with a verbal warning, then a more serious penalty of suspension or discharge if the conduct does not change. For very serious matters, employees may be discharged without warning.
These policies, and the surrounding circumstances of Biggins’ termination, formed the basis of the jury’s finding that (1) the 1980 Employee Handbook established a contract between Hazen Paper and Biggins of other than at-will employment, and (2) that Big-gins’ termination in 1986 breached the contract embodied in the Handbook because the company failed to follow the procedures specified in the Handbook governing employee counselling and “discipline.”
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Biggins, we are nonetheless compelled to hold that the district court erred in denying the defendants’ motion for j.rno.v. After reviewing the various principles of contract formation specifically enumerated by the Jackson court as being necessary to establish the existence of a contract other than at-will employment, we find the evidence lacking in two important respects.
First, in affirming a grant of summary judgment against an employee,
Jackson
held that it was “significant that nothing in the circumstances here revealfed] any negotiation over the terms of the personnel manual.”
Jackson,
Second, there was no showing that prior to Biggins’ termination that “special attention was called to the manual by the defendant ... [and] no indication that the plaintiff signed the manual, or in any way manifested his assent to it or acknowledged that he understood its terms.”
Jackson,
The most that can be said here is that after Biggins’ termination, Hazen Paper refused to pay him for his accrued vacation time on the basis of language in the Employee Handbook. Biggins, in turn, attempted to hold the defendants to the standards of behavior provided in other portions of that manual. We do not think that under Massachusetts law a jury would be permitted to find that the 1980 Employee Handbook established an implied or express contract of other than at-will employment with Biggins. Consequently, since such an employment contract did not exist at the time of Biggins’ termination, there could have been no breach.
Even if we concede that Biggins satisfied some of the elements of contract formation required by Jackson, 9 we think that his *1424 failure to adduce evidence to support at lеast two of the principal elements of that inquiry was fatal to his claim. Under these circumstances, the district court was required to grant j.n.o.v. Where there was no employment contract other than at-will established or implied under the 1980 personnel manual, the jury’s award of damages must be vacated.
D. Massachusetts Civil Rights Act
On cross-appeal, Biggins challenges the district court’s grant of j.n.o.v. reversing the jury’s award of one dollar in compensatory damages for violation of the Massachusetts Civil Rights Act. Mass. Gen.L. ch. 12, §§ 11H & 111. 10 To recover under these provisions, a plaintiff must prove that
(1) his exercise or enjoyment of rights secured by the Constitution or laws of either the United States or of the Commonwealth (2) has been interfered with, or attempted to be interfered with, and (3) that the interference or attempted interference was by “threats, intimidation or coercion.”
Bally v. Northeastern Univ.,
On appeal, Biggins insists that the district court too narrowly construed the meaning of “threats, intimidation or coercion” when it found Biggins’ case distinguishable from “most [Civil Rights Act] cases recognized by the Supreme Judicial Court [which] involve the threat of physical contact.” Biggins argues that the district court erred because it required proof of a threat of physical harm.
In
Bally,
the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court noted that almost all of the cases in which it had granted relief under the Civil Rights Act involved “a physical confrontation accompanied by a threat of harm.”
Id.
We agree with the district court that j.n.o.v. was appropriate. In the
Redgrave
decision, the Supreme Judicial Court found that a deprivation of Redgrave’s contract rights could have been caused by “threats, intimidation and coercion” — specifically, threats to the safety of the audience and members of the Boston Symphony Orchestra made by community members and subscribers after the announcement of Redgrave’s planned performance.
See Redgrave,
Biggins did not offer evidence that showed that, as in
Redgrave,
the deprivation of his contract or constitutional rights was caused by indirect physical “threats, intimidation or coercion.” We therefore see little reason to deviate from the Supreme Judicial Court’s repeated pronouncement that a defendant can be held liable under the Civil Rights Act only in situations that “involve[ ] an actual or potential physical confrontation accompanied by a threat of harm.”
Layne v. Superintendent, Massachusetts Correctional Inst.,
V. PREJUDGMENT INTEREST
The district court- awarded prejudgment interest “on the entire award.” In
Powers v. Grinnell Corp.,
*1426 Although Powers would also preclude prejudgment interest on the state law claim of breach of the employment contract, our reversal of the district court’s ruling on that claim and annulment of the damages renders this issue moot.
The state law claim based on fraud, however, stands on a different footing. This was not a claim for the back pay and lost employment benefits encompassed within the ADEA count. The fraud count in the complaint was premised on a promise by the defendants that “they would pay him [plaintiff] in addition to his regular salary corporate stock of a value which would increase his annual compensation to $100,-000.” The jury was instructed properly on each count of the complaint. The only instruction that referred directly to the stock promise was on the fraud count: “The next count is fraud or deceit. Plaintiff also alleges that Defendants committed fraud or deceit by promising to give Plaintiff stock but never delivering the stock.” The court then went on to instruct the jury carefully and properly on the proof necessary for a finding of fraud under Massachusetts common law. The jury was further instructed not to award duplicative damages: “In awarding dаmages, you should be careful not to award duplicative damages; that is, Plaintiff is entitled to collect full compensation for his injuries, but he must not collect more than once for the same wrong.”
An analysis of the jury’s awards on the fraud and ADEA counts shows that its award for fraud was not duplicative of its award on the ADEA count. The jury awarded plaintiff $315,000 on the fraud claim. The plaintiff’s damages evidence on this count was that the stock loss amounted to $342,498. The jury award of $315,-000 was a rough approximation of the plaintiff’s evidence. On the ADEA count, the jury awarded plaintiff $560,775. As already pointed out, this was $141,320.62 more than the plaintiff’s losses in salary, employment benefits and bonus. It is, however, a far cry from the stock loss of $342,000.
We see no reason why prejudgment interest should not be allowed on a state law claim that is, as here, separate and distinct from the ADEA claim. This was well within the district court’s discretion.
See Freeman v. Package Machinery Co.,
We now turn to the ERISA damages award. We have been unable to find any cases discussing whether or how an award of liquidated damages under an ADEA claim affects the addition of prejudgment interest to ERISA damages. We do know, however, that “[a]s a matter of federal law, prejudgment interest is a discretionary item of compensation.”
Conway v. Electro Switch Corp.,
In
West Virginia v. United States,
As with the state law fraud claim, the ERISA award did not duplicate the ADEA award. It was not based on loss of back pay and other employment benefits due and owing at the time plaintiff was discharged. In awarding damages on the ERISA count, the jury found that “defendants fired plaintiff for the purpose of preventing plaintiff from attaining vestment of pension benefits, in violation of ERISA.” We have already found that the jury verdict on this count had a solid evidentiary foundation. Defendants argue that because the pension rights would not be payable until 1994, prejudgment interest cannot be awarded. This overlooks the obvious fact that the plaintiff has been damaged now because defendants took away pension benefits by firing him before his rights to the pension could vest. We affirm the award of prejudgment interest on the ERISA damages.
VI. ATTORNEY’S FEES
After trial, Biggins moved that he be awarded attorney’s fees undеr the ADEA count, the ERISA count, and the Massachusetts Civil Rights Act count in the amount of $666,729.12. This amount represented one-third of the total jury verdict of $2,000,187.35. In its memorandum opinion and order on the post-trial motion, the district court reduced the ADEA award by one-half and found, as a matter of law, that plaintiff was not entitled to liquidated damages. It seems apparent that, regardless of the numbers, plaintiff sought an enhancement of attorney’s fees equal to one-third of the final judgment on damages. This is borne out by an affidavit of plaintiff’s counsel submitted in support of its motion for attorney’s fees.
This affidavit stated, inter alia, that the case was handled on a one-third contingent fee basis with the plaintiff responsible for the expenses incurred; and that in the legal market for the geographic area in which plaintiff’s counsel practices — Springfield, Massachusetts — a one-third contingent fee agreement is the typical method of compensation for attorneys representing plaintiffs on employment-related litigation. 12 The chief counsel for the plaintiff stated:
I agreed to accept this case on a contingent fee basis, even with the knowledge that this would be a long and complicated case, because I knew this was the only way to provide access to the Courts for Mr. Biggins, and because our risk taking had the potential for reward if successful with a premium in excess of our normal hourly rates. If the Court’s award of attorneys’ fees is limited to payment for hours expended multiplied by our normal hourly rates, then I would be discouraged from taking these types of cases in the future when I could be spending my time on cases where I would bе paid without risk of non-payment according to my normal hourly rate.
Plaintiff's counsel also submitted detailed records of the time spent by the attorneys and paralegals on the case and a fee computation based on this and the hourly rates charged by the different attorneys who worked on the case. The total legal fees, as determined by the time expended multiplied by hourly rates, came to $182,058.25. The district court adjusted this fee slightly to reduce the hourly payment rates on work performed by experienced attorneys on “non-core” matters. The court arrived at a lodestar fee in the amount of $175,564.57. Biggins does not appeal the court’s determination of the lodestar fee award.
The district court refused, however, to enhance the lodestar fee award to an amount equivalent to one-third of the total damages awarded. Plaintiff appeals *1428 the refusal of his request for enhancement of the fee award.
The issue of enhancement of legal fees to reflect the contingency of services — the risk involved of not getting paid — was the focus of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Pennsylvania v. Delaware Valley Citizens’ Council for Clean Air,
The issue thus involves damages cases that lawyers would not take, not beсause they are too risky (the fee-shifting statutes should not encourage such suits to be brought), but because the damages likely to be recovered are not sufficient to provide adequate compensation to counsel, as well as those frequent cases in which the goal is to secure injunctive relief to the exclusion of any claim for damages. In both situations, the fee-shifting statutes guarantee reasonable payment for the time and effort expended if the case is won.
Id.
It appears to us that in this case fee enhancement is not warranted. Although the fee contract between plaintiff and his attorneys is not part of the record, it can be fairly inferred from counsel’s affidavit that Biggins and his attorneys entered into a fee agreement whereby Biggins agreed to pay his attorneys one-third of the amount of damages awarded and be responsible for expenses. In his affidavit, chief counsel for Biggins stated that “our risk taking had the potential for reward if successful with a premium in excess of our normal hourly rates.” On the basis of the adjustment in damages made in this opinion, and without adding prejudgment interest, plaintiff’s attorneys are entitled to fees under their contingent fee arrangement of more than twice the amount of the lodestar fee award. Plaintiff’s counsel, as he anticipated, will in fact be rewarded with a premium in excess of his normal hourly rates.
The substantial recovery of damages in this case stands in contrast to the situation in a majority of civil rights cases in which the damages are so low that fees based on a contingent fеe agreement are less than the lodestar recoverable as attorney’s fees. In
Blanchard v. Bergeron,
This does not mean that a lodestar fee should not be determined. The lodestar fee, which is paid by the defendant, acts as a deterrent to future violations of the ADEA. As the
Blanchard
Court pointed out, “[t]he defendant is not, however, required to pay the amount called for in a contingent fee contract if it is more than a reasonable fee calculated in the usual way.”
Id.
CONCLUSION
1. We uphold the finding of liability on the ADEA count. We find, as a matter of law, that the violation was willful. The damages are reduced from $560,775 to $419,454.38. Because this *1429 was a willful violation that amount is doubled to $838,908.76.
2. We uphold the finding of liability on the ERISA count. We order a remit-titur of $7,000 on the damages award of $100,000.
3. We uphold the finding of liability on the wrongful discharge count. We leave undisturbed the award of one dollar in damages.
4. We uphold the finding of liability on the fraud count and affirm the damages award of $315,098.
5. We reverse the finding of liability on the breach of employment contract count. The damages award on that count of $266,897 is annulled.
6. We affirm the district court’s grant of j.n.o.v. on the Massachusetts Civil Rights Act count. This means the jury award of one dollar in damages is annulled.
7. No prejudgment interest can be awarded on the ADEA count. We uphold the awards of prejudgment interest on the ERISA count and the wrongful discharge and fraud counts.
8. We affirm the district court’s refusal to enhance plaintiff’s attorney’s fees.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part. Remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.
No costs to either party.
Notes
.
Loeb
held,
inter alia,
that in this circuit good faith could not be used as a defense in an ADEA case.
Id.
at 1020. We agree with the Fifth Circuit’s decision in
Powell v. Rockwell Int'l. Corp.,
. In this exhibit, the plaintiffs also alleged an additional "stock loss” of $342,498. On appeal, plaintiffs do not argue that the jury's award of damages in excess of $419,454.38 could have been derived from this figure. We also note that, as discussed in Part V, infra, we consider the stock loss for which Biggins recovered on the common law fraud claim separate and distinct from the $419,454.38 in back pay recovered under the ADEA claim.
. Appellants claim that "plaintiff at no time suggested in any of his plеadings below that he was entitled to Hazen Paper stock as a matter of contract law.” We note that ¶ 11 of Biggins’ Amended Complaint alleges that in response to Thomas Hazen’s promise that he would provide Biggins with stock "sufficient to raise his salary ... [to] $100,000[,] [t]he plaintiff agreed to this offer and in reliance on the defendant’s promise continued to allow the defendant company to make use of his formula and process ... and continued his employment with the defendant corporation." (Emphasis added). While Big-gins did not allege any independent claim of breach of contract based on failure to deliver the allegedly promised stock, it is clear that in his wrongful discharge claim Biggins alleged the contractual elements necessary to support a claim of deprivation of previously earned “compensation.”
. In
Rizzo,
the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court reinstated a jury verdict in favor of a plaintiff seeking to recover on an oral contract for personal services. The Court concluded that
*1419
"the conversation upon which the jury was permitted to find an agreement ... was not too vague and indefinite to form the basis for a contract.”
. The appellants also argue that any contract based on an agreement to give Biggins stock in the Hazen Company would not be enforceable because it was an oral promise unsupported by a writing that would fail under the Massachusetts statute of frauds. In the district court below, however, appellants never raised this argument, preferring instead to rely on assertions that there could have been no consideration for any contract based on Biggins’ ownership of the formula for the acrylic. Because the defendants did not raise these objections in the district court, we decline to address them on appeal.
See, e.g., Boston Celtics Ltd. Partnership v. Shaw,
. The defendants also challenge the adequacy of the fraud claim with an argument not raised in either of their motions for directed verdict and j.n.o.v. in the district court. They now claim that Thomas Hazen did not make a false promise of stock to Biggins with the present intention not to fulfill that promise. Appellants waived this argument through their failure to present it
*1420
to the district court.
See Boston Celtics Ltd. Partnership,
. In any case, the record does not support Big-gins' repeated insistence that the jury was presented with evidence showing that he gave up a specific opportunity to sell the rights to the formula after the alleged stock-for-rights agreement with Hazen in 1984.
. We think that
Davis v. Sweetheart Plastics, Inc.,
. The evidence is inconclusive, at best, to establish some of the other elements required by the
Jackson
court. For example, in rejecting the plaintiffs claim of an implied contract, the Supreme Judicial Court placed particular reliance on the fact that the defendant expressly retained
*1424
the right to modify unilaterally the personnel manual’s terms.
Jackson,
The
Jackson
court offered no bright-line standards as to how “clear an indication an employer must give in connection with distributing an employee manual before it may be found that the employer entered into a contact on other than a strictly at-will basis.”
Id. Jackson
nonetheless places the burden on the employee to prove the existence of the formation of a contract. In this case, there was no express reservation of a right of modification by Hazen Paper. We think that Massachusetts courts would probably not consider the mere fact of the absence of such a reservation adequate evidence to support an employee’s claim of the formation of a contract other than at-will employment. We also note that we have previously resolved in favor of the employer ambiguities created by the silence of an employment manual on the issue of whether that manual constitutes part of an employment contract.
See Menard,
. Mass.Gen.L. ch. 12, § 11H provides in pertinent part that
Whenever any person or persons, whether or not acting under color of law, interfere by threats, intimidation or coercion, or attempt to interfere by threats, intimidation or coercion, with the exercise or enjoyment by any other person or persons of rights secured by the constitution or laws of the United States, or ... commonwealth, the attorney general may bring a civil action....
Mass.Gen.L. ch. 12, § 111 creates a private right of action for persons whose rights have been "interfered with" in the manner proscribed by section 11H.
. The state law claims were brought under the Rhode Island Fair Employment Practices Act.
. There were affidavits by two other attorneys ■ from the same legal market area to the same effect.
