Del Monte Fresh Produce Co. v. Net Results, Inc.

77 So. 3d 667, 2011 Fla. App. LEXIS 16345, 2011 WL 4949872
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedOctober 19, 2011
DocketNo. 3D10-1052
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 77 So. 3d 667 (Del Monte Fresh Produce Co. v. Net Results, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Del Monte Fresh Produce Co. v. Net Results, Inc., 77 So. 3d 667, 2011 Fla. App. LEXIS 16345, 2011 WL 4949872 (Fla. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

SALTER, J.

Del Monte Fresh Produce Company appeals a final judgment exceeding $15.7 million in favor of its telecommunications-cost consultant, Net Results, Inc., following a jury trial. We affirm the jury’s and trial court’s determinations that Del Monte breached the parties’ consulting contract, [669]*669but we reverse the jury’s $10,000,000 consequential damages award and the prejudgment interest and attorney’s fees and costs subsequently added by the trial court.1 This is a business damages case in which the computation of Net Results’ “benefit of the bargain” losses requires grade-school arithmetic rather than a “damages model” long on assumptions and short on facts. The jury’s award is neither reasonably certain nor supported by substantial competent evidence.

I. Facts and Procedural History

A. The Consultative Services Agreement

In July 2002, Del Monte and Net Results signed Net Results’ “consultative services agreement” (“Agreement”). Essentially, Net Results agreed to review Del Monte’s local and long distance telephone bills, and its costs for certain data and information technology services, to look for past overcharges and future savings. Any such recoveries of overcharges or savings to Del Monte, including any refunds, rebates, credits, promotional awards, or renegotiated rates, would entitle Net Results to a consulting fee equal to thirty-five percent of the amount recovered or saved. The Agreement was also clear that “if there are no savings, [Net Results] receives no fee.”

The Agreement obligated Net Results to prepare a “Summary Benchmark Proposal,” referred to by the parties as an “SBP,” after researching Del Monte’s teleeommu-nications and information technology contracts and billings.2 The SBP was to be provided to Del Monte and, if the proposal disclosed cost reductions and savings opportunities above $300 per month, Del Monte had to elect within ten days from receipt whether to (a) terminate the agreement by written notice to Net Results or (b) pay the 35% fee on the credits and savings as invoiced by Net Results each month for the following twelve months. The Agreement also provided that it would automatically renew for a further twelvemonth term on each anniversary of the Agreement unless, at least sixty days before the expiration of an anniversary date, Del Monte cancelled it.

Regarding any “historic savings” that might be achieved by Net Results by, for example, demonstrating to a telecommunications carrier that Del Monte had been overbilled, Net Results was to be entitled to its 35% fee “back at least three years or for the life of any telecommunications agreement, equipment or facilities lease, cellular, paging or data service agreement negotiated by [Del Monte], by [Net Results], or by any other party for [Del Monte].” Finally, the Agreement specified that “[i]f any term is unclear or ambiguous it shall be interpreted to the benefit of [Net Results].”

B. Performance and the SBP

After the parties signed the Agreement, Del Monte executed written authorizations [670]*670to its telecommunications and data vendors to turn over agreements and billing data to Net Results for research. In November 2002, Net Results provided a one-page memo and two-page attachment to Del Monte’s head of information technology and one of its lawyers. The attachment was the table of contents (with none of the actual findings of fact or conclusions of law) from a 2001 Federal Communications Commission order in favor of AT <& T regarding its complaint that Business Telecom, Inc. (“BTI”), charged consumers excessive “access rates.” Although there was no indication how Del Monte might save money because of such an FCC order, Net Results said in the cover memo:

Attached is one of many Federal Orders which underlay [Net Results’] efforts to recovery unfounded charges by AT & T (for Example) and for others such as Bell South, SBC, and even Equant in the mis-billing of local access charges with long distance on that local bill at dramatically incorrect rates, or even the incorrect re-bill of so many international frame relay circuits.
This is part of the our knowledge template with these carriers and we are using these to force AT & T and the other international carries such as British Telecom, Entel Chile, Telephono Mexico, Brazil’s Telecom, and many more into the USA mandated refunds and redress. This has been missed by Del Monte and AT & T and others for many years and there are apparently as much as $10,000,000 (estimated) of recoveries or credits due to Del Monte.

[All spelling and grammar are as in the original].

The memo went on to estimate that historic refunds and credits due might total $24,700,000 or more, and that prospective annual savings might be $7,600,000. The memo acknowledged that these amounts exceeded a full year of Del Monte’s entire national and international expenditures for the telecommunications services in question,3 and it noted that additional information and time would be required. The memo does not explain how the 2001 FCC order attached to it (pertaining to BTI’s permissible rates) might produce any savings or refunds to Del Monte, nor does it appear that Del Monte even did business with BTI during the applicable periods.

While the record does not appear to contain an SBP submitted to Del Monte with an identifiable title “Summary Benchmark Proposal,” Net Results maintains that its research was summarized and accepted by Del Monte when Del Monte paid a series of the Net Results invoices.4 The jury plainly accepted Net Results’ argument on this factual question.

[671]*671C. Del Monte’s Attempt to Terminate the Agreement

After receiving Net Results’ recommendations and a series of invoices, several of which were paid by Del Monte, Del Monte abruptly decided to terminate the Agreement. In an internal email dated May 14, 2008, a letter purportedly terminating the Agreement before automatic renewal was forwarded to the Del Monte information technology officer who had signed the Agreement in July 2002. As prepared on Del Monte letterhead and as signed by that officer, the letter was backdated to May 1, 2003. At trial, Net Results argued that (a) the letter was fraudulently backdated in a transparent effort to prevent a further automatic one-year renewal of the Agreement5 and (b) the legal effect of that ineffectual, untimely notice was a repudiation and breach of the Agreement excusing further performance by Net Results.

The jury accepted Net Results’ claim of breach and liability. The trial court denied relief on that aspect of Del Monte’s motion and renewed motion for directed verdict, and subsequently on Del Monte’s motion for a new trial. As a result of the untimely notice, the Agreement was extended through a term ending July 8, 2004. Del Monte became liable for 35% of Del Monte’s savings that were identified, obtained, or could have been identified or obtained by Net Results, during that term (absent Del Monte’s repudiation), less Net Results’ costs of achieving any such results. As to any “historic savings” identified or obtained within that term, the three-year lookback provided a 35% fee to Net Results on rebates, refunds, or savings on covered billings and services back to July 3,1999.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 So. 3d 667, 2011 Fla. App. LEXIS 16345, 2011 WL 4949872, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/del-monte-fresh-produce-co-v-net-results-inc-fladistctapp-2011.