Cook v. Coldwell Banker/Frank Laiben Realty Co. — Study Outline

I. Case Overview

  • Case: Cook v. Coldwell Banker/Frank Laiben Realty Co.
  • Citation: 967 S.W.2d 654 (Mo. Ct. App. 1998)
  • Category: Contracts

II. Facts

Cook was a real estate salesperson affiliated with Coldwell Banker/Frank Laiben Realty Co. At the outset of the sales year, Coldwell Banker publicly announced a year-long incentive program that promised additional compensation (a bonus/extra commission) to agents who met specified production thresholds by year's end. The announcement was made to induce increased sales effort and was framed as a reward for hitting enumerated levels of sales or commissions during the calendar year. As the year progressed and agents were working toward those goals, management later announced—around September—that payment would be made at the company's awards banquet the following spring and that only agents still affiliated with the firm at the time of payout would receive the bonus. Cook continued to perform, met the specified production requirements by the end of the year, and thereby qualified for the promised bonus under the original program terms. Before the awards banquet and the deferred payout date, however, Cook left the firm to join another brokerage. Coldwell Banker refused to pay the bonus on the ground that Cook was no longer affiliated with the company at the time of the banquet. Cook sued for breach of contract (and in the alternative, relied on promissory estoppel), contending she had accepted the offer by performance and that the late-added continued-employment condition was ineffective. The trial court entered judgment for Cook, and Coldwell Banker appealed.

III. Issue

Whether an employer that offers a year-end bonus as an inducement for sales performance may later impose a continued-employment-at-payout condition and deny payment to a salesperson who met the performance criteria but left the company before the scheduled payout date.

IV. Rule

A promise of a bonus in exchange for specified performance creates an offer for a unilateral contract that is accepted by performance. Under Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 45, once the offeree begins the invited performance, an option contract is created that makes the offer irrevocable for a reasonable time to complete performance; upon completion of the required performance, the offeror is bound. The offeror cannot unilaterally add material conditions after the offeree has begun (or completed) performance absent the offeree's assent and separate consideration. An employer may not withhold earned compensation by retroactively imposing a continued-employment condition that was not part of the original offer.

V. Holding

The bonus program formed a unilateral contract that Cook accepted by performance. The later attempt to condition payment on Cook's continued affiliation with Coldwell Banker at the time of the awards banquet was ineffective. Cook earned the bonus by satisfying the program's stated performance requirements, and Coldwell Banker was obligated to pay.

VI. Reasoning

The court characterized the bonus plan as a unilateral offer: Coldwell Banker sought to induce heightened sales by promising a defined bonus upon attainment of objective production thresholds. Acceptance was to be manifested not by a return promise but by doing the specified acts—hitting those thresholds by year's end. Cook began performing under the program when she pursued and closed sales in reliance on the announced incentive. Under Restatement § 45 and Missouri law, once the offeree begins performance in response to an offer inviting performance, the offer becomes temporarily irrevocable; the offeror cannot revoke or materially modify the terms to the detriment of the offeree who is already performing. Moreover, once Cook completed performance by meeting the year-end benchmarks, the unilateral contract was fully formed and Coldwell Banker's duty to pay matured. Coldwell Banker's later pronouncement that agents had to be "actively affiliated" at the spring awards banquet to receive the bonus was a material modification that lacked consideration and Cook's assent. The purported condition did not relate to the performance the offer originally demanded (i.e., making sales/achieving thresholds) but instead sought to add a new prerequisite to payment after Cook had already been induced to perform. The timing of the award banquet and the deferred payout were administrative details; they did not transform continued employment into a condition of earning the bonus when the core performance—achieving the stated production goals—was complete. At-will status did not authorize the employer to forfeit already-earned compensation. Because Cook qualified under the original program and the modification was ineffective, the refusal to pay constituted a breach. The judgment for Cook was therefore affirmed.

VII. Significance

Cook solidifies the modern approach to unilateral contracts in the employment/independent-contractor context: bonus and commission plans are enforceable when they contain definite terms and invite performance, and employers cannot retroactively add forfeiture conditions after performance has begun or been completed. The case also underscores that at-will employment does not permit employers to withhold compensation that has already been earned under an existing offer. For students, Cook is a blueprint for analyzing incentive-plan disputes—identify the offer, the invited mode of acceptance, the point at which performance began, and whether any alleged modification is supported by consideration and assent.

VIII. Conclusion

Cook v. Coldwell Banker confirms that bonus and commission plans structured as offers for performance create enforceable unilateral contracts when the offeree performs as requested. Employers cannot later graft a continued-employment or "must be present to win" condition onto a plan after agents have begun or completed performance, absent assent and new consideration. Once the performance is complete, the obligation to pay is fixed.

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