http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-love13feb13,0,694327.story?track=tothtml
'Love contract'? It's office policy
Voluntary agreements help employers avoid legal
liability if a work romance turns sour.
By Molly Selvin
Times Staff
Writer
February 13, 2007
With many workers having an office
valentine — and even canoodling on the job — some employers don't want to be
liable if the romance fizzles.
They are asking workers, mostly senior
executives, to sign "love contracts" that shield employers from liability if
intimacy later congeals into a sexual harassment lawsuit or some other discord.
The contracts, most common in the entertainment industry, also act as a formal
way for a couple to disclose a relationship in case their dalliance could affect
the bottom line or generate negative publicity.
Such a contract might
have been useful for former Boeing Co. Chief Executive Harry Stonecipher, whose
extramarital affair with a mid-level female executive rocked the aerospace
company in 2005 and led to his ouster.
"If Stonecipher had been able to
say, 'Wait a minute, we disclosed this relationship four years ago,' there might
have been a different reaction at the board of directors level," said San
Francisco attorney Garry Mathiason, who said his firm has drafted 1,000 of the
several thousand love contracts existing today.
Such a contract was used
in connection with the proposed sale of a Southland manufacturing firm, said
Monica Ballard, president of Parallax Education, a Santa Monica-based consulting
firm. The manufacturing company's president and vice president of sales, each
married, were having an affair.
The CEO of the manufacturing firm had
them sign a love contract so he could disclose the relationship to the buyer.
The sale fell through, Ballard said, but for other reasons. She declined to
reveal the name of the company.
With Cupid's quivers making office
romances more numerous, lawyers and mediators say love contracts could become
more common. A recent survey found that 43% of U.S. workers admit to having
dated a co-worker, and many of those relationships lead to
marriage.
Lovers try to keep many of these relationships secret. But when
a relationship becomes known or when an executive decides to reveal it, the
couple might then be asked to sign a love contract declaring their affection to
be "voluntary" and "consensual." The voluntary nature of the contract shields
employers from liability, lawyers say, if the affair goes sour.
"It helps
to put some paper around it, like a prenuptial agreement," Mathiason said.
"Consensual relationship agreements," the legal name for the love
contracts, first emerged about eight years ago in the wake of former President
Clinton's dalliance with then-White House intern Monica Lewinsky, Mathiason
said. Corporate counsels grew fearful that an affair involving one of their
executives could end in a big-bucks liability payout. Mathiason, whose firm
represents employers, said many panicked clients asked him, "Whoa, what in the
world do we do?"
Lawyers and consultants interviewed for this story
declined to disclose which companies have requested these contracts, citing
confidentiality.
A typical contract may state, "I know that this may
seem silly or unnecessary to you, but c it is very important to me c that you be
fully comfortable that our relationship is at all times voluntary and
welcome."
The lovebirds usually acknowledge they have read the company's
sexual harassment policy and that they are free to break up without adverse
effects on their jobs. The signed original is usually filed with the company's
human resources department.
The love contracts haven't been tested in
court, Mathiason said, but some disgruntled employees who have signed them later
tried to recast a past affair as nonconsensual. Retrieving the contract ended
talk of litigation, he said.
"This is what the world of litigation has
brought us," he added.
molly.selvin@latimes.com