The plaintiff, William P. Wilson (“Bill”), brought suit against the defendants, alleging that the defendants, as trustees, had breached their duty to use reasonable care in managing various trusts of which Bill was a beneficiary. The parties appeared at a pretrial conference where the district court concluded on the record that the parties had reached an oral agreement to settle the underlying lawsuit. Following unsuccessful attempts to reduce this agreement to writing, Bill filed a motion to enforce the oral settlement agreement, which the district court granted. The defendants challenge the district court’s decision to enforce the settlement agreement on the grounds that the parties had never entered into a legally binding agreement to settle the underlying lawsuit. We reject this contention and affirm the decision of the district court.
*662 I.
Francis S. Wilson, Jr., set up various trusts for the benefit of his wife, Kathryn W. Wilson, and his five children, including Bill Wilson. The trustees of these trusts included Bill’s brothers, John G. Wilson (“Jack”), Thomas Wilson (“Tom”), and Francis S. Wilson, III (“Tug”), and Bill’s cousin, David Wilson.
On December 29, 1989, Bill filed his initial complaint against Jack, Tug, and David Wilson, along with Philip E. Rollhaus, Jr., and Melvin L. Katten, alleging that these defendants, as trustees and/or former trustees, had breached their fiduciary duties in the management of the various trusts. Bill eventually settled his claims against Tug. Following this, Bill filed his amended complaint, asserting the same and additional claims, and adding Tom Wilson and F.S.W., Inc. (an investment management business in which Jack Wilson was an officer, shareholder and director) as additional defendants.
On September 4, 1992, counsel for both parties appeared before the district judge for a pretrial conference where they attempted to work out a settlement of Bill’s claims. Jack and Bill Wilson were also present. The judge started off the conference by stating that the parties had reached a settlement agreement. At that point, neither Jack nor Bill, nor either party’s counsel, contested that statement. The court then proceeded to lay out on the record the terms of that agreement: Defendants Jack, Tom and F.S.W., Inc. would transfer to Bill a combination of cash and property totalling $1.2 million. Specifically, Jack, Tom and F.S.W., Inc. were to pay over to Bill $500,000 in cash within 28 days of the hearing. In addition, both Jack and Tom were to transfer to Bill their combined interest in a real estate partnership, estimated to be worth approximately $700,000. The parties agreed that the court would appoint an independent appraiser to appraise the value of the partnership interest. If the appraised value of the partnership interest fell between $600,000 and $800,-000, then no further consideration would be transferred to Bill. If, on the other hand, the appraised value came in either below $600,000 or above $800,000, then the court stated, without objection from either party, that it would determine what additional assets were to be transferred to Bill, so that he would receive exactly $1.2 million. In exchange for these promises, Bill would forever be barred from bringing all claims against the defendants for any acts that gave rise to his suit. There was some quibbling between counsel over whether this latter objective of the agreement — Bill’s promise not to sue— would be best served by adopting mutual releases or mutual covenants not to sue. However, the district court observed that as long as the parties agreed that there could not be any actions between the parties, then this objective would be part of the parties’ settlement agreement, and it would be up to the parties’ attorneys to demonstrate later to the court which legal form could best achieve that objective. Neither the attorneys nor the parties present raised any objection to this statement by the district court.
Following further discussions the court stated it was leaving it up to the parties’ attorneys to reduce the specifics of their agreement to a written document. The court anticipated that some disputes would arise in drafting the specifics of the settlement agreement. However, the court unequivocally stated — again, without objection — that “[a]s far as I’m concerned, there is an agreement and nothing has to be signed.” Indeed, when asked by Bill Wilson’s attorney whether the parties could keep the trial date until a written agreement was signed by the parties, the district court rejected this request and repeated its earlier conclusion that the parties had nailed down an agreement.
Over the next three months, the parties argued back and forth about the specifics of their agreement without ever producing a mutually agreeable document. On December 8, 1992, Bill filed a motion with the district court seeking enforcement of the agreement he claimed was reached by the parties at the September 4th hearing. This motion was continued. Following additional negotiations between the parties, Bill, on February 19, 1993, filed a supplement to his earlier motion to enforce in which he reiterated his contention that the parties had entered into a binding settlement agreement at the September *663 4th hearing. On February 23, 1993, defendants filed a response in which they joined Bill’s motion and acknowledged that the partied had entered into a settlement .agreement on September 4, 1992. Defendants’ main purpose in filing their response was simply to ensure that the settlement agreement entered into between the parties was not narrowed to exclude certain defendants from the agreement thus leaving them open to future suits.
Based on the parties’ representations, the court, on January 7, 1994, directed Bill’s attorney to prepare and submit a judgment order enforcing the parties’ agreement. Defendants apparently began entertaining doubts about the settlement, for on January 11, 1994, defendants’ counsel filed an emergency motion to strike Bill’s motion to enforce the parties’ settlement agreement. In their motion, defendants’ principal contention was that since the parties had never reached a “meeting of the minds” over whether Bill and the defendants would exchange mutual releases or mutual covenants not to sue, there was never an intent to be bound and therefore no agreement to enforce. Therefore, defendants requested the court to conduct an evidentiary hearing on the issue of whether the parties had entered into an agreement. In the alternative, defendants claimed that subsequent correspondences from Bill’s attorney indicated that Bill had repudiated any agreement reached by the parties.
That same day the parties appeared before the court on defendants’ emergency motion. The court’expressed its initial disagreement with the defendants’ position, noting that everyone present at the September 4th hearing had agreed with the court’s conclusion on the record that day that the parties had reached a settlement agreement. Nevertheless, the court told the defendants that it would review the transcripts of the September 4th hearing in determining whether the parties had reached an agreement.
On January 21, 1994, the district court entered an order in which it concluded that the parties had reached a settlement agreement on September 4, 1992. Accordingly, the court entered judgment of $1.2 million in favor of Bill and against Jack, Tom and F.S.W., Inc. The court further ordered that Bill would be barred from bringing any other claims against the defendants that had accrued on or before September 4, 1992. Finally, the court dismissed all of Bill’s remaining claims against Jack, Tom and F.S.W., Inc. with prejudice and directed an entry of judgment pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b). The defendants sought reconsideration of this order, which the district court denied. We have jurisdiction over this appeal. 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II.
The central issue presented by the defendants is whether the district court incorrectly concluded that the parties had reached an oral settlement agreement at the September 4, 1992' hearing. Initially, we must ascertain the appropriate standard of review. Defendants assure us that the answer to this is found in a footnote contained in this court’s decision in
Laserage Technology Corp. v. Laserage Laboratories, Inc.,
However, a closer examination of
Laserage
indicates that the opinion contains no clear guidance on this matter. At one point in the footnote, the court intimates that a deferential review is appropriate, citing to our previous decision in
Merritt v. Faulkner,
Our own research has revealed that the majority of the other circuits have addressed this issue. These circuits have uniformly stated that a district court possesses the inherent or equitable power summarily to enforce an agreement to settle a case pending before it.
See, e.g., Murchison v. Grand Cypress Hotel Corp.,
Having settled that, we note that these same courts have repeatedly cautioned that a district court may only enforce
completed
settlement agreements.
See, e.g., Murchison,
The defendants attempt to fit their appeal within this analytical framework. Their principal objection is that the parties had never reached a “meeting of the minds” at the September 4th hearing with respect to Bill’s part of the bargain. Specifically, defendants maintain that the parties never agreed on the exact terms of Bill’s promise to drop his pending claims. Defendants claim that there are remaining unresolved matters, such as whether Bill would be barred from bringing all known or unknown claims against the defendants or only those of which Bill could have reasonably known, whether the parties would execute mutual releases or mutual covenants not to sue, and who would be covered by these releases or covenants. Defendants argue that the failure to finalize these terms creates a factual dispute over whether the parties ever reached an agreement. They insist these disputes require us to remand this case to the district court for an evidentiary hearing.
We are not persuaded by defendants’ attempt to fit this case within that line of
*665
decisions requiring an evidentiary hearing. First of all, in all of those decisions where the existence of an agreement was in dispute, the only evidence supporting an agreement was the affidavits and briefs of one party’s counsel stating that the parties had reached an agreement outside the presence of the court.
See, e.g., TCBY Systems,
Moreover, in those other decisions, the party challenging the existence of a settlement agreement raised this objection at the first available opportunity to the district court. In our case, the proper time for defendants to have challenged the existence of a settlement agreement was when the parties appeared before the court on September 4, 1992. Yet at no time during that hearing did defendants’ counsel, of any of the defendants present in court, ever challenge the existence of a settlement, nor did they object to the court’s conclusion twice on the record that the parties had reached a binding settlement agreement. What is more, five months later, in response to Bill’s motion to enforce the settlement, the defendants filed a motion with the court in which they joined Bill’s motion and agreed that a settlement had been reached. Nearly a year went by after the defendants filed this motion without them ever once challenging the existence of an agreement. It was not until after the court ordered Bill’s counsel to prepare and submit a judgment order that the defendants’ counsel first alerted the district court that he wished to challenge the settlement’s existence. This is simply too late.
This conclusion is in accord with the Fourth Circuit’s decision in
Petty v. Timken Corp.,
Nor do we accept defendants’ contention that no contract could exist as a matter of law. The parties agree that since the dispute in this case arose under Illinois law, whether or not a contract to settle was formed is also governed by Illinois law. In Illinois, “[a]n oral agreement to settle will be enforced as long as there is clearly an offer and acceptance of the compromise and a meeting of the minds as to the terms of the agreement.”
Brewer v. National R.R. Corp.,
Defendants’ next claim is that even if there was a meeting of the minds, the fact that the parties never agreed on the legal forms of the releases renders this agreement too indefinite to be enforceable. In making this argument, defendants rely upon our decision in
United States v. Orr Const. Co.,
*667
For starters,
Orr
has no application to this ease.
Orr
was a case involving an attempted settlement of a claim arising under federal law.
2
Orr
made it clear that “when federal law governs the substantive rights of the parties and provides the basis on which the parties were able to bring the matter -into federal court ... enforceability of the [settlement] agreement must be decided as a matter of federal law.”
Id.
at 769. And since as previously indicated, Illinois law controls this dispute, there is no need to resort to federal law. Under Illinois law “[a] contract is sufficiently definite and certain to be enforceable if the court is enabled from the terms and provisions thereof, under proper rules of construction and applicable principles of equity, to ascertain what the parties have agreed to do.”
Academy Chicago Publishers v. Cheever,
Defendants raise other arguments, yet these deserve only brief discussion. For instance, the defendants claim that subsequent to the September 4th hearing, Bill’s attorney sent defendants a letter in which he allegedly repudiated the settlement agreement reached by the parties. Yet this court long ago made it clear that “a settlement agreement or stipulation voluntarily entered into cannot be repudiated by either party and will be summarily enforced by the Court.”
Cummins Diesel Michigan, Inc. v. The Falcon,
m.
We have examined the transcript of the September 4, 1992 hearing and agree with the district court’s determination that the parties on that date entered into a binding and enforceable agreement to settle Bill’s claims. Therefore, we Affirm the district court’s order enforcing that agreement.
