SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-843-94T3
RICHARD GILLMAN,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
BALLY MANUFACTURING CORPORATION
and BALLY'S PARK PLACE, INC.,
Defendants-Respondents.
_________________________________________________________________
Argued December 5, 1995 -- Decided January 5, 1996
Before Judges Michels, Baime and Villanueva.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Chancery Division, Essex County.
Kenneth D. McPherson, Jr. argued the cause
for appellant (Waters, McPherson, McNeill,
attorneys; Mr. McPherson and Frederic K. Becker,
Roger B. Kaplan and Wilentz, Goldman & Spitzer,
of counsel; Mr. McPherson, on the brief).
Steven S. Radin argued the cause for
respondents (Sills Cummis Zuckerman Radin
Tischman Epstein & Gross, attorneys; Mr. Radin
and Ronald C. Rak, of counsel; James M.
Hirschhorn and Paul F. Doda, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
MICHELS, P.J.A.D.
Plaintiff Richard Gillman appeals from a summary judgment of the Chancery Division entered in favor of defendants Bally Manufacturing Corporation and Bally's Park Place, Inc. (hereinafter collectively referred to as "Bally") that dismissed his complaint seeking (1) damages based on both intentional and
negligent misrepresentation with respect to Bally's administration of certain stock option rights granted to him as severance consideration and (2) equitable relief from Bally's contention that his option rights had been forfeited as a result of his attempt to exercise a portion of those rights sixteen days after the date Bally maintained the rights were last exercisable. Plaintiff, who served for many years as one of Bally's top executives, signed agreements (hereinafter collectively referred to as the Option Agreements) with Bally in July and October of 1991, which granted him options to buy one million shares of Bally stock and 300,000 shares of Bally Gaming International, Inc. stock. Under the Option Agreements, the options had a ten-year life as long as plaintiff remained employed by Bally. The Option Agreements further provided that if he retired, the options were only exercisable within one year after retirement and, if he was terminated for other reasons, the options were only exercisable within three months. On January 8, 1993, plaintiff retired from Bally under a Retirement and Separation Agreement that vested his unmatured stock options and which provided that he could exercise the options according to the terms of the respective Option Agreements. However, plaintiff failed to exercise approximately forty percent of the Bally options and all of the Bally Gaming International, Inc. options within one year after his retirement as required under the Option Agreements. When he attempted to exercise the options on January
24, 1994, sixteen days after the one-year period had elapsed,
Bally refused to permit the purchase of the stock.
Plaintiff instituted this action seeking to reinstate the
options he lost through his inaction, raising essentially three
points. First, plaintiff claimed that under his contract with
Bally he was entitled to exercise the options within ten years
after their issuance or until 2001, rather than one year after
his retirement. Second, he claimed that if he was subject to the
one-year deadline, Bally, through fraudulent or negligent
statements, misled him into believing that he had ten years to
exercise the options. Finally, plaintiff claimed that the
expiration of the options was a forfeiture and that he should be
relieved from it on the basis that he made an honest mistake
regarding the expiration date of the options.
Following cross-motions for summary judgment, Judge Margolis
in the Chancery Division found that plaintiff had retired and
that the Option Agreements with Bally clearly provided that the
options would lapse one year after his retirement. The trial
court further found that Bally made no false representations or
fraudulent or negligent statements concerning the option dates.
Finally, with respect to the forfeiture claim, the trial court
held that a sophisticated businessman, such as plaintiff who was
represented by experienced counsel, should have known the
expiration date of the options and should not be relieved from
the consequences of his inaction. The trial court thereupon
entered summary judgment in favor of Bally. Plaintiff appealed.
Plaintiff seeks a reversal of the summary judgment,
contending that (1) his right to receive cash under vested
options was fully supported by prior consideration to Bally and
any lateness in the exercise of the options would be an
immaterial breach by him which will not sustain forfeiture; (2)
even in cases outside the employment context involving "time of
the essence" options, relief from forfeiture should be granted in
instances of non-prejudicial lateness due to reasonable mistake;
(3) in construing his severance contract as subjecting his
options to a one-year exercise period, the trial court improperly
(a) rendered terms of the agreement superfluous; (b) excluded
drafting history evidence to the contrary; and (c) resolved
factual issues of Bally's state of mind on the basis of
affidavits; and (4) in dismissing his claims for intentional and
negligent misrepresentation and for "bad faith" breach of
contract, the trial court improperly resolved issues of Bally's
state of mind based on affidavits.
We are satisfied from our review of the record and the
arguments presented that the trial court properly granted summary
judgment in favor of Bally and that all issues of law raised are
clearly without merit. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E). We are convinced
that there does not exist a genuine issue of material fact which
precluded the granting of summary judgment in favor of Bally
whether the matter is viewed traditionally under Judson v.
Peoples Bank & Trust Co. of Westfield,
17 N.J. 67 (1954), or
under the standard more recently announced in Brill v. Guardian
Life Ins. Co. of Am.,
142 N.J. 520 (1995).
Additionally, we emphasize that the trial court's exercise
of discretion in denying plaintiff's forfeiture claim may be
disturbed only if it is "so wholly insupportable as to result in
a denial of justice." Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. v. Kin
Properties, Inc.,
276 N.J. Super. 96, 106 (App. Div.), certif.
denied,
139 N.J. 290 (1994) (quoting Rova Farms Resort, Inc. v.
Investors Ins. Co. of Am.,
65 N.J. 474, 484 (1974)). "[I]n
reviewing the exercise of discretion it is not the appellate
function to decide whether the trial court took the wisest
course, or even the better course, since to do so would merely be
to substitute our judgment for that of the lower court. The
question is only whether the trial judge pursues a manifestly
unjust course." Gittleman v. Central Jersey Bank & Trust Co.,
103 N.J. Super. 175, 179 (App. Div. 1967), rev'd on other
grounds,
52 N.J. 503 (1968).
"[E]quity's jurisdiction in relieving against a forfeiture
is to be exercised with caution lest it be extended to the point
of ignoring legal rights." Dunkin' Donuts of Am. v. Middletown
Donut Corp.,
100 N.J. 166, 182 (1985); Brick Plaza, Inc. v.
Humble Oil & Refining Co.,
218 N.J. Super. 101, 104 (App. Div.
1987). When a contract expressly provides for expiration of a
party's rights at a time certain, "a court of equity will not
interfere to substitute a different and more liberal agreement"
than that which existed between the parties. Fox v. Haddon Tp.,
137 N.J. Eq. 394, 398 (Ch. 1945). "An express contract, making
time a particular of it, cannot be ignored by a court of equity."
Gorrie v. Winters,
214 N.J. Super. 103, 107 (App. Div. 1986)
(quoting Collins v. Delaney Co.,
71 N.J. Eq. 320, 322 (Ch.
1906)), certif. denied,
107 N.J. 114 (1987). "Although a broad
forfeiture clause in an employment or [stock] option contract may
work harsh results, a court must act only upon the language of
the written contract. . . ." Fredericks v. Georgia-Pacific
Corp.,
331 F. Supp. 422, 427 (E.D. Pa. 1971), dismissed,
474 F.2d 1338 (3d Cir. 1972).
In an option contract, "time is of the essence." 1A Corbin
on Contracts, §273 (1963 & Supp. 1994); Brick Plaza, supra, 218
N.J. Super. at 104; Sosanie v. Pernetti Holding Corp.,
115 N.J.
Super. 409, 413 (Ch. Div. 1971). Generally, expiration
provisions in stock option agreements are strictly enforced.
Courts reject the inevitable breach of contract and forfeiture
claims that employees, former employees and other stock option
holders press when they fail to timely exercise their options.
See, e.g., Bernard v. IMI Systems, Inc.,
131 N.J. 91, 106-07
(1993) ("[I]t is not uncommon for an employee's right to exercise
a stock option to terminate upon such employee's termination from
employment."); Mullen v. New Jersey Steel Corp.,
733 F. Supp. 1534, 1554 (D.N.J. 1990) (employee's failure to purchase stock
options before termination led to loss of the options);
Fredericks, supra, 331 F. Supp. at 428 ("having left the
employment of Georgia-Pacific prior to exercising the remaining
options, Fredericks' right to exercise the options terminated.").
For example, in Mullen, supra, 733 F. Supp. at 1552-53, the
Federal District Court held that even if a vice-president
believed that his stock options did not expire when his
employment terminated, that belief would have been unreasonable
because it was contrary to the option agreement's express
provisions and no one at the company had told him that he would
still be able to exercise them. Similarly, in Fredericks, supra,
331 F. Supp. at 424, an executive who resigned by agreement,
later argued that he should be permitted to exercise his
remaining options post-termination because he had been driven out
of his position before he could exercise them. The Federal
District Court strictly enforced a provision that the executive's
options expired when his employment terminated, holding that the
option agreement clearly provided that it would expire on
termination, which must have been clear to the executive as well,
since he "was a businessman and the president of a large
corporation[.]" Id. at 427.
In Brick Plaza, supra, we strictly enforced the expiration
date of an option to purchase land against an experienced
businessman even though doing so meant the plaintiff lost the
value of significant improvements to the land. The plaintiff in
Brick Plaza asked to be relieved from the option's expiration
because its president's failure to timely exercise the option was
claimed to be an "honest mistake." We rejected the argument,
finding that plaintiff's president acted unreasonably:
Plaintiff's [president's] reliance upon an
unsigned preliminary draft of the lease
agreement when the original of the executed
agreement was in the possession of its own
attorney amounts, in our view, to a course of
"positive neglect." "Equity does not
ordinarily aid one whose indifference was the
sole cause of the injury of which he now
complains." [Brick Plaza, supra, 218 N.J.
Super. at 105 (citations omitted).]
Despite his out-of-pocket losses, we declined to relieve
plaintiff from the consequences of its president's mistake,
stating that business people are entitled to stability in their
business arrangements:
It may be that a court of equity could
provide a wiser and more beneficent result
than that dictated by the agreement before
us. But this is not what the parties
bargained for. Business people do not enter
into agreements to provide grist for the work
of the courts. They do so to bring order and
predictability to their affairs. . . .
Parties should not be obliged to speculate
about how the conscience of a court may
define their rights and obligations. . .
[O]ur interest in preserving the stability of
business arrangements outweighs whatever
equitable purpose may be served by relieving
plaintiff from the consequences of its own
neglect. [Ibid.]
Here, relying on Brick Plaza, supra, the trial court
properly rejected plaintiff's "mistake" argument, stating:
Gillman was represented by competent counsel
at all relevant times -- he was a
sophisticated businessman upon whose behalf a
detailed agreement was negotiated. . . .
[I]f Gillman was not aware of the option
exercise date, his counsel was, or should
have been. This Court cannot choose to
ignore bargained-for legal rights under these
circumstances under the guise of a
forfeiture.
Plaintiff was one of two top executives of a major
corporation. He was advised by experienced counsel in a multi-million dollar transaction. Like the plaintiffs in Brick Plaza,
supra, Fredericks, supra and Mullen, supra, plaintiff and his
attorneys should have looked to the executed agreements that
governed his rights, not to earlier unexecuted drafts of those
agreements and other documents that do not purport to
definitively set forth his post-retirement stock option rights.
The trial court properly enforced the express, bargained-for
terms of his Option Agreements and Retirement and Separation
Agreement, and refused to grant plaintiff equitable relief from
the consequences of his and his counsel's neglect. See Brick
Plaza, supra, 218 N.J. Super. at 105.
The Option Agreements specifically provided that if
plaintiff died, became disabled, or retired from Bally, his
options must be exercised within one year of his departure
instead of the initial ten-year term of the options. Plaintiff's
argument that the "late exercise of his options was the product
of reasonable mistake on his part," and that the "trial court
failed to appreciate the significance of this `mistake' evidence"
is not compelling. Plaintiff was an experienced executive,
represented by competent counsel. It was his duty to keep
abreast of his stock options and their respective expiration
dates. His failure to timely exercise them may not be excused
based on claims of harmless mistake.
While plaintiff concedes that generally time is of the
essence in stock option contracts, he suggests that "time of the
essence" restrictions do not apply to his stock options because
they were part of an employee severance package and he did not
pay Bally for the shares. He characterizes his options as
"earned right[s]" from his former employment with Bally that are
"supported by prior consideration[.]" This attempt to
recharacterize these options is unpersuasive. The requirement
that plaintiff have exercised his options by January 8, 1994
remains unchanged. Options are ordinarily granted for "prior
consideration." An option contract is "a continuing offer
supported by a sufficient consideration, a promise upon an
executed legal consideration, and so irrevocable for the time of
its continuance." Borough of West Caldwell v. Borough of
Caldwell,
26 N.J. 9, 26 (1958). Whether a stock option is
granted for money, for past services, as an incentive for future
services, or for no consideration at all, the option holder must
exercise the option within its term or he loses his right to do
so. Furthermore, once plaintiff ceased working for Bally, it
would be foolhardy to believe that plaintiff should be entitled
to the options as "earned rights." Once plaintiff retired, the
options provided him no incentive to aid the business efforts of
Bally, and, therefore, any extension of the life of the options
served no benefit to Bally.
Plaintiff also stresses the supposed difference between his
"cashless exercise" of the stock options and those stock options
where a cash price must be tendered at the time of exercise.
However, whether the exercise of an employee stock option is for
cash or "cashless," the principle remains the same. The employee
pays the option price and realizes a profit because the market
price is higher than the option price. The only difference is
that in a "cash exercise," the employee tenders money for the
option price, while in a "cashless exercise" some of the optioned
stock is used to pay the option price. In both cases, the
employee obtains a benefit only because the present value of the
stock is greater than the option price.
Whether given as a reward or as an incentive for loyal
service, an employee's ability to exercise stock options is often
subjected to time limitations. See Bernard, supra, 131 N.J. at
108; Mullen, supra, 733 F. Supp. at 1553; Fredericks, supra, 331
F. Supp. at 428. The fact that plaintiff could have obtained
shares under his options by tendering the exercise price in stock
rather than in cash makes no difference. Like any other
employee, plaintiff had to exercise his options on time and
according to their express terms, in order to properly purchase
them under the Option Agreements.
Bally has a significant business interest in maintaining the
integrity of the expiration dates of stock options it issues,
regardless of how they may be exercised. By issuing stock
options, a company potentially dilutes the value of existing
shares. As a publicly traded company, Bally has a duty to its
stockholders to put clear limitations on that potential dilution.
Plaintiff's Option Agreements provided for exercise by either
cash or "cashless" payment. Either way, Bally, through the
Option Agreements, provided expiration dates within which
departing employees could exercise their stock options, in order
to strike a balance between the grant of compensation and
performance incentives on the one hand, and the protection of
existing shareholders' interests against dilution on the other.
"[S]tock options are an incentive to `stimulate the efforts
of key employees and to strengthen the desire of such employees
to remain in the employment of the Corporation.' Such incentives
do not apply to [retired] employees." Bernard, supra, 131 N.J.
at 107. Once plaintiff retired, Bally received no benefit from
his continuing ownership of his stock options, yet he still had
one year to exercise them. Plaintiff's neglect in failing to
purchase his options within the one-year term, even if through
mistake, resulted in his loss of the options. Consequently,
plaintiff may not exercise his options outside the one-year term
permitted under the Option Agreements.
Accordingly, the summary judgment under review is affirmed
substantially for the reasons expressed by Judge Margolis in his
thorough and thoughtful letter opinion of August 23, 1994.