CATV Services, Inc. v. Arguss Communications, Inc.

194 F. App'x 547
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 8, 2006
Docket04-1448
StatusUnpublished

This text of 194 F. App'x 547 (CATV Services, Inc. v. Arguss Communications, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CATV Services, Inc. v. Arguss Communications, Inc., 194 F. App'x 547 (10th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

*548 ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

TIMOTHY M. TYMKOVICH, Circuit Judge.

Defendant-Appellant Arguss Communications hired Plaintiff-Appellee CATV Services to liquidate leftover telecommunications equipment worth over $1 million. During the course of performance, Arguss sold some of the equipment on its own, despite a provision in the agreement that gave CATV the exclusive right to sell the equipment. CATV sued Arguss for breach of contract, claiming that Arguss failed to pay the commission on the sales.

The case was tried to a jury, which found in favor of CATV on the primary breach of contract claim. During trial, the district court resolved three legal issues against Arguss: (1) a motion for judgment as a matter of law on the claims in CATV’s favor, (2) a jury instruction on contract formation, and (3) a motion for a new trial. Arguss appeals these three rulings, but we AFFIRM.

I. Background

Because this appeal comes to us after a jury verdict below, we state the facts in the light most favorable to the jury’s decision. See, e.g., Macsenti v. Becker, 237 F.3d 1223, 1242 (10th Cir.2001); United Phosphorus, Ltd. v. Midland Fumigant, Inc., 205 F.3d 1219, 1226 (10th Cir.2000).

Arguss is a telecommunications contractor. In 1998, Arguss contracted with a predecessor of AT & T Broadband (“AT & T”) to help with a telecommunications project AT & T was undertaking near Portland, Oregon. As part of this project, Arguss purchased equipment, using funds advanced by AT & T. By August 2000, however, AT & T decided to discontinue the project, so Arguss no longer needed a large quantity of unused equipment. Because AT & T had advanced the funds to purchase the equipment in the first place, Arguss wanted AT & T to take back the unused equipment. AT & T, on the other hand, wanted Arguss to sell it.

In the past, AT & T had used a company called CATV Services to resell equipment from prior projects and suggested Arguss hire CATV to sell the unused equipment here. CATV was a telecommunications equipment broker. For years it had been hired by telecommunications contractors to resell used and new telecommunications equipment. CATV’s customary practice was to work with the owner of the goods to prepare an inventory that would “define[ ] the equipment that [CATV would] have a right to sell on an exclusive basis.” R. at 749-50. This inventory was important because it would be the basis of CATV’s commission. CATV would then prepare the goods for sale, ship them to purchasers, collect the proceeds, and then remit 60% to the client within thirty days, keeping a 40% commission. CATV typically operated on an exclusive basis, wherein it, not the equipment owner, would sell the goods.

Based on AT & T’s recommendation, Arguss decided to explore the possibility of working with CATV. The key players in the contract negotiations were Richard Richmond, president of CATV; Steve Burrows, Vice President of Arguss; and Randy Pierce, president of a construction company owned by Arguss.

Contract negotiations began in February 2001 and continued through April. At the outset of negotiations, Richmond explained to Burrows how CATV typically *549 operated. Arguss raised several concerns, which were resolved during the negotiation process. Primarily, Arguss was concerned with the commission and the time for payment. Because Arguss’s equipment was all new, CATV agreed to sell it at a 30% commission rather than its standard 40%. Also, CATV agreed to remit the balance within fifteen, rather than thirty, days.

Another big concern for Arguss was the term of performance. Arguss was paying thousands of dollars per month to rent space in Portland to warehouse the equipment. When Pierce and Burrows asked how quickly CATV could liquidate the goods, Richmond assured them it would probably take thirty to forty-five days. In the event that liquidation extended beyond that period, Richmond promised to ship the unsold equipment to his warehouse in Florida, where he would continue trying to sell the equipment. At trial, Burrows testified that this was his understanding as well — CATV “would take [any equipment that was not sold in the 30 to 45 days] into [its] warehouse and sell it from there.” R. at 619.

As negotiations proceeded, the parties began to prepare for performance. On March 4, 2001, CATV employee Ross Hunter traveled to the Portland warehouse to assess the equipment CATV could end up selling. A month later, on April 4 or 5, Richmond advised Arguss he would send an inventory team to Portland the following Monday, April 9. Pierce testified that he would not have allowed workers on site if a deal had not been struck, and Burrows testified at one point that CATV and Arguss had reached a verbal agreement by this time. Richmond, however, testified that he sent the inventory team because he was confident that they would reach an agreement, although the terms had not yet been finalized. Burrows himself testified that as of April 4, they “had a verbal agreement where we were trying to go with this,” but “the deal wasn’t completed by any stretch of the imagination at this point.” R. at 573.

On April 9 or 10, Richmond, Burrows, and Pierce finalized the agreement during a three-way telephone conversation. By that time, both parties agreed that a deal had been reached. However, one thing remained — Richmond told them he would send a one-page document, putting in writing the final terms of the deal. Pierce and Burrows said this was not a problem.

Richmond emailed the document to both Burrows and Pierce on April 11. Although Burrows acknowledged that he received the email, he did not “really recall” seeing the attached document. R. at 578. He claimed he probably did not pay much attention to it because it was prepared for Pierce’s signature. Pierce acknowledged that he saw the email on his computer screen and knew it was from Richmond but insisted that he never opened the email, despite the fact that he knew Richmond would be sending a one-page document reflecting their agreement.

Later that day Richmond called Pierce to discuss the project. In that conversation, he told Pierce he “needed to execute the document and have it returned.” R. at 764. Pierce responded, “I’ve looked it over. I don’t have any problem. I’ll get it signed and get it back to you.” R. at 764. Richmond testified, “Once Mr. Pierce said he was going to sign and return the document, it was a done deal for me,” even though he would never receive a signed copy of the contract. R. at 765.

The document attached to the email was entitled simply “Brokerage Sales Agreement.” Richmond testified that this contract used the same boilerplate language as in all CATV contracts. Unlike CATV’s other contracts, however, this document had been modified to include a 70-30 split *550

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