JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge:
Inappropriate for certification because of the unusual posture of the issues and their straightforward, settled nature,
this case takes us down the Florida law spur of
Erie R. R.
v.
Tompkins.
A number of questions line the tracks. When is a lease not a lease? What effect should be given to the terms of a contract which was executory and was in a sense not carried out by the parties? How can disclaimers and limitations of liability be unconscionable as a matter of law? To find the answers, we look to Florida’s general contract law and to its version of the Uniform Commercial Code, Fla.Stat. §§ 671.101
et seq.
(“Code” or “U.C.C.”).
A three-party transaction is the subject of this appeal. Earman Oil Company was the user of a Burroughs Model L 8800-100 computer.
The supplier of the computer was Burroughs Corporation. The computer was technically sold by Burroughs to the third party — National Equipment Rental Limited (NER). Simultaneously, NER leased the computer to Earman. Burroughs sent the computer directly to Earman, which in turn made “rental” payments to NER.
This common arrangement leads to little trouble until the user feels that the computer has, so to speak, gone awry. Then there is litigation.
So it is here. Earman, having no recourse against NER, brought claims for breach of implied and express warranties and for tortious misrepresentation against Burroughs. Earman further narrowed these claims in the District Court. That Court rejected the narrowed claims. On appeal, we affirm.
This trouble began in 1975 when Earman and a Burroughs representative agreed that Earman needed a Burroughs computer. For financial reasons, Earman decided not to try to buy the computer outright, however. Instead, the computer was to be sold to a leasing company which would then lease to Earman. First, however, Burroughs had to locate an agreeable leasing company. So Burroughs asked Earman to sign a contract purporting to sell the computer and associated hardware directly to Earman. That “Equipment Sale Contract” (ESC) identified the computer by model type but not by serial number, and showed a price of approximately $26,155.
Five days later, Burroughs had located NER to act as leasing company and Ear-man signed a lease for the equipment previously designated in the ESC, with the exception of one immaterial item. At the end of the lease, Earman was to redeliver the computer to NER.
NER countersigned the lease seven days later and simultaneously executed a purchase order to Burroughs for the same model computer and associated hardware. The purchase order designated Earman as lessee. A few months later the leased computer was installed. Allegedly there was trouble from the start, which Burroughs attempted to remedy. Many attempts and two years later, Earman brought this suit against Burroughs.
The thrust of Earman’s complaint was that Burroughs: (i) breached its' oral express warranties; (ii) breached its implied warranties of fitness for a particular purpose and of merchantability; and (iii) tor-tiously misrepresented the qualities of its computer. In defense, Burroughs asserted that exculpatory provisions of the ESC, signed by Burroughs and Earman, protected Burroughs from liability.
Earman’s counterattack was three-pronged. First, Earman argued that the real economic effect of the transactions involving NER was important in determining whether the previously executed ESC could be accorded any significance. If NER was a true lessor and was not acting solely as a financing agent, then the real economic effect of the three-party transaction was a sale by Burroughs to NER. Earman argued that this meant that the ESC must be treated as a nullity and that only the provisions of the purchase order in the sale to NER could be accorded significance. Second, Earman argued that the purchase
order contained no effective exculpatory provisions. Asserting that it was a third party beneficiary of the purchase order, Earman concluded that by virtue of the purchase order it could recover against Burroughs on theories of express and implied warranty. Third, Earman contended that even if the restrictions of the ESC were applicable, they were unconscionable and therefore unenforceable.
In order to clarify the legal issues and especially the unconscionability claim, the District Court held a pre-trial hearing. There, the Court first held as a matter of law — though not fact — that the ESC’s restrictions were not unconscionable. Second, as a matter of law, the Court held that the exculpatpry language of the ESC governed the relationship between Earman and Burroughs. That conclusion was based on two alternative grounds: (i) That the real economic effect of the transaction was a sale between Earman and Burroughs with NER having only a financing interest in the equipment; or (ii) if NER had more than a financing interest, the restrictions of the ESC were nonetheless applicable to Ear-man’s suit as a matter of contract interpretation. Either way, Earman’s claims would be subject to defenses based upon the ESC’s disclaimers,
damage limitations,
and integration provisions.
Upon the Court’s ruling, Earman was granted a recess in order to consider the situation. Earman’s position at the hearing and its interpretation of the issues and facts in the pre-trial stipulation were largely dependent on a favorable ruling with respect to the ESC.
Given the adverse resolution of that issue and the unconscionability issue, Earman decided during the recess not to proceed to trial on the remaining factual issues. Without asking the District Court to proceed to trial on unresolved factual issues, Earman requested the entry of final judgment, which was duly granted.
Earman then brought this appeal. Essentially the same three issues considered by the District Court in its pre-trial ruling are contested by Earman.
Thus we are asked to determine the real economic effect of the transaction, to decide whether the ESC’s exculpatory provisions apply, and to find whether those provisions are unconscionable.
We do not decide whether further fact-finding might permit Earman to prevail. Earman’s case below was predicated on a favorable resolution of the issues of law. Except for an ambiguous reference in the conclusion of its appellate brief,
Earman does not now seek reversal for lack of fact-finding. Furthermore, the factual aspects of Earman’s claims were not properly raised in the District Court.
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JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge:
Inappropriate for certification because of the unusual posture of the issues and their straightforward, settled nature,
this case takes us down the Florida law spur of
Erie R. R.
v.
Tompkins.
A number of questions line the tracks. When is a lease not a lease? What effect should be given to the terms of a contract which was executory and was in a sense not carried out by the parties? How can disclaimers and limitations of liability be unconscionable as a matter of law? To find the answers, we look to Florida’s general contract law and to its version of the Uniform Commercial Code, Fla.Stat. §§ 671.101
et seq.
(“Code” or “U.C.C.”).
A three-party transaction is the subject of this appeal. Earman Oil Company was the user of a Burroughs Model L 8800-100 computer.
The supplier of the computer was Burroughs Corporation. The computer was technically sold by Burroughs to the third party — National Equipment Rental Limited (NER). Simultaneously, NER leased the computer to Earman. Burroughs sent the computer directly to Earman, which in turn made “rental” payments to NER.
This common arrangement leads to little trouble until the user feels that the computer has, so to speak, gone awry. Then there is litigation.
So it is here. Earman, having no recourse against NER, brought claims for breach of implied and express warranties and for tortious misrepresentation against Burroughs. Earman further narrowed these claims in the District Court. That Court rejected the narrowed claims. On appeal, we affirm.
This trouble began in 1975 when Earman and a Burroughs representative agreed that Earman needed a Burroughs computer. For financial reasons, Earman decided not to try to buy the computer outright, however. Instead, the computer was to be sold to a leasing company which would then lease to Earman. First, however, Burroughs had to locate an agreeable leasing company. So Burroughs asked Earman to sign a contract purporting to sell the computer and associated hardware directly to Earman. That “Equipment Sale Contract” (ESC) identified the computer by model type but not by serial number, and showed a price of approximately $26,155.
Five days later, Burroughs had located NER to act as leasing company and Ear-man signed a lease for the equipment previously designated in the ESC, with the exception of one immaterial item. At the end of the lease, Earman was to redeliver the computer to NER.
NER countersigned the lease seven days later and simultaneously executed a purchase order to Burroughs for the same model computer and associated hardware. The purchase order designated Earman as lessee. A few months later the leased computer was installed. Allegedly there was trouble from the start, which Burroughs attempted to remedy. Many attempts and two years later, Earman brought this suit against Burroughs.
The thrust of Earman’s complaint was that Burroughs: (i) breached its' oral express warranties; (ii) breached its implied warranties of fitness for a particular purpose and of merchantability; and (iii) tor-tiously misrepresented the qualities of its computer. In defense, Burroughs asserted that exculpatory provisions of the ESC, signed by Burroughs and Earman, protected Burroughs from liability.
Earman’s counterattack was three-pronged. First, Earman argued that the real economic effect of the transactions involving NER was important in determining whether the previously executed ESC could be accorded any significance. If NER was a true lessor and was not acting solely as a financing agent, then the real economic effect of the three-party transaction was a sale by Burroughs to NER. Earman argued that this meant that the ESC must be treated as a nullity and that only the provisions of the purchase order in the sale to NER could be accorded significance. Second, Earman argued that the purchase
order contained no effective exculpatory provisions. Asserting that it was a third party beneficiary of the purchase order, Earman concluded that by virtue of the purchase order it could recover against Burroughs on theories of express and implied warranty. Third, Earman contended that even if the restrictions of the ESC were applicable, they were unconscionable and therefore unenforceable.
In order to clarify the legal issues and especially the unconscionability claim, the District Court held a pre-trial hearing. There, the Court first held as a matter of law — though not fact — that the ESC’s restrictions were not unconscionable. Second, as a matter of law, the Court held that the exculpatpry language of the ESC governed the relationship between Earman and Burroughs. That conclusion was based on two alternative grounds: (i) That the real economic effect of the transaction was a sale between Earman and Burroughs with NER having only a financing interest in the equipment; or (ii) if NER had more than a financing interest, the restrictions of the ESC were nonetheless applicable to Ear-man’s suit as a matter of contract interpretation. Either way, Earman’s claims would be subject to defenses based upon the ESC’s disclaimers,
damage limitations,
and integration provisions.
Upon the Court’s ruling, Earman was granted a recess in order to consider the situation. Earman’s position at the hearing and its interpretation of the issues and facts in the pre-trial stipulation were largely dependent on a favorable ruling with respect to the ESC.
Given the adverse resolution of that issue and the unconscionability issue, Earman decided during the recess not to proceed to trial on the remaining factual issues. Without asking the District Court to proceed to trial on unresolved factual issues, Earman requested the entry of final judgment, which was duly granted.
Earman then brought this appeal. Essentially the same three issues considered by the District Court in its pre-trial ruling are contested by Earman.
Thus we are asked to determine the real economic effect of the transaction, to decide whether the ESC’s exculpatory provisions apply, and to find whether those provisions are unconscionable.
We do not decide whether further fact-finding might permit Earman to prevail. Earman’s case below was predicated on a favorable resolution of the issues of law. Except for an ambiguous reference in the conclusion of its appellate brief,
Earman does not now seek reversal for lack of fact-finding. Furthermore, the factual aspects of Earman’s claims were not properly raised in the District Court. To the extent that any are now being raised for the first time on appeal, we will not consider them.
Fishing Fleet, Inc. v. Trident Insurance Co.,
598 F.2d 925, 926 n. 1 (5th Cir. 1979). We now proceed to the legal issues properly placed before us by Earman.
Earman first urges us to decide whether or not the three-party transaction had the real economic effect of a sale by Burroughs to Earman. In form, the transaction consisted of a sale to NER followed by a lease of the equipment to Earman. Thus, in form there was no completed sale of the equipment directly to Earman.
Earman’s primary position is that the subsequent sale to NER had real economic substance. Therefore the lease by NER to Earman was not a financing arrangement nor a subterfuge for taking a security interest in the equipment. If a “true” leasing arrangement was involved, then Earman argues that the NER purchase agreement with Burroughs is of greater significance while the earlier executed ESC between Burroughs and Earman becomes insignificant.
If, on the other hand, NER’s lease was not a true lease but rather a financing arrangement, Earman acknowledges that there is more precedent for giving effect to the ESC. Nonetheless, Earman asserts that its position is distinguishable and that the ESC should not apply.
We need not resolve the issue of the transaction’s character in order to decide this appeal, however. We find that either resolution of the issue leads to the same disposition of the appeal. We first assume that the lease was a true lease.
I. If A True Lease
If the lease was a true lease, Earman argues that the only sale of the equipment was from Burroughs to NER. That contract is set out by NER’s purchase order. The purchase order expressly designates Earman as intended lessee. Because Ear-man is so designated it is persuasively argued that Earman is a third party beneficiary with the right to enforce the provisions of the purchase order.
American Empire Insurance Co. of South Dakota v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland,
408 F.2d 72 (5th Cir. 1969);
Weimar v. Yacht Club Point Estates, Inc.,
223 So.2d 100 (Fla.App. 1969).
As third party beneficiary, Earman first argues that it is entitled to enforce the implied warranty rights of NER against Burroughs. Earman recognizes, however, that its implied warranty theory is made difficult by two terms of the NER-Burroughs contract, as set out on NER’s purchase order form. One term, left partially uncompleted, was rubber-stamped onto the purchase order by Burroughs:
By the below signature of buyer, or his authorized representative, the sale of this equipment shall be governed by the terms and conditions contained in agreement Form No._, the receipt of copies of which are hereby acknowledged by the buyer. Further, the buyers purchase order printed terms and conditions herein are null and void.
The period of normal maintenance coverage applicable to equipment purchased hereunder is-months.
This term is stamped on the face of the purchase order, directly below the description of the equipment purchased. That placement and the fact that the term is rubber-stamped, tends to make the term conspicuous even though the print of the term is smaller than that used in the rest of the purchase order. This term obviously refers to the ESC, which contains the disclaimers and limitations of liability which seemingly defeat Earman’s claims.
Even if for some reason the rubber-stamped term does not apply, another term of NER’s purchase order form also indicates that the provisions of the ESC apply to Earman’s claims (emphasis supplied):
You [Burroughs] warrant that EQUIPMENT will comply with all warranties, agreements and representations made by you to LESSEE [Earman], “By your acceptance [Burroughs’s acceptance] of this order and invoice to us [NER], you agree that you will make available to LESSEE [Earman] and will permit LESSEE [Ear-man] to enforce against you your
standard
representations, warranties and service obligations
in the same manner as if LESSEE [Earman] were the purchaser of the EQUIPMENT.”
This term is an integral part of the purchase order form, printed in a type size equal to that of other portions of the form.
Earman launches an innovative attack on these two terms. Earman argues that the terms (i) are not conspicuous and (ii) do not mention the word “merchantability.” Therefore, under U.C.C. § 2-316(2),
the terms are insufficient to disclaim (i) all implied warranties and (ii) the implied warranty of merchantability, respectively. Since those implied warranties are not effectively disclaimed, Earman concludes that it may recover as a third party beneficiary of NER’s implied warranty rights.
The obvious weakness in Earman’s attack is that those terms of the purchase order are not warranty disclaimers in the first place. It is unimportant that the terms may not meet § 2-316(2)’s requirements. Clearly perceived, the second of the terms is an
express
grant of third party beneficiary rights to Earman but conditioned with an incorporation of Burroughs’s
“standard
representations, warranties and obligations” (emphasis supplied). The term expressly provides that “all warranties, agreements and representations” made by Burroughs to Earman are to be enforceable by Earman. By specifying that Earman was to be treated as a “purchaser” and by referring to Burroughs’s “standard” representations, the language itself seemingly
incorporates the prior dealings of Burroughs and Earman. Those prior dealings encompass the ESC and its exculpatory provisions. We find that this language is sufficient to condition Earman’s third party rights to the terms and conditions of the ESC, which embodies all of the prior dealings of Earman and Burroughs.
Furthermore, the first term, though not filled in, was an obvious attempt to incorporate by reference the terms and conditions of the ESC. The Code provides that a course of dealing between the parties is relevant to the interpretation of uncertain, incomplete terms.
The dealings between Earman, Burroughs, and NER certainly indicate that the incomplete portion of the purchase order was intended to refer to the ESC, thereby incorporating it by reference.
That Earman’s third party rights under the purchase order are governed by the ESC’s terms and conditions is further supported by a venerable principle of contract law. In a computer lease case almost identical in facts to the instant one, the Kansas Supreme Court stated:
It is well settled principle of law that where two or more documents are executed by the same parties at or near the same time in the course of the same transaction and concern the same subject matter they will be read and construed together.
Atlas Industries, Inc. v. National Cash Register Co.,
216 Kan. 213, 220, 531 P.2d 41, 46-47 (1975) (citing
Topeka Savings Association v. Beck,
199 Kan. 272, 428 P.2d 779 (1967). The principle applies to documents executed in the course of a transaction even though they are executed days or weeks apart. Florida recognizes this contemporaneous transaction principle.
J. M. Montgomery Roofing Co. v. Fred Howland, Inc.,
98 So.2d 484 (Fla.1957);
Northwestern Bank v. Cortner,
275 So.2d 317 (Fla.App. 1973) (loan guarantee was subject to terms of loan agreement, yet was executed several days before the loan agreement was executed).
The documents involved in the instant case were executed over a 12-day period and manifestly concerned the same transaction. Reading the lease, purchase order, and ESC together is therefore appropriate. Although viewed in isolation the ESC was executory, when it is viewed as part of the entire transaction it is apparent that the ESC’s statement of rights and obligations continues to govern Earman’s relationship with Burroughs. The purchase order (and even, more obliquely, the lease),
incorporates the ESC in the context of defining Earman’s rights. Thus the ESC governs Earman’s rights with respect to Burroughs.
II. If A Financing Arrangement
For much the same reasons, no different result is reached if the lease was a financing arrangement rather than a true lease. Again the contemporaneous transaction principle requires that we construe the three documents together. Assuming now that the lease was a financing arrangement, the real economic effect of the transaction was a sale direct from Burroughs to Ear-man. That effect coalesces with the ESC’s express purpose: a sale direct from Burroughs to Earman. The coalescence is all the more reason, under the contemporaneous transaction principle, to give effect to the ESC’s unambiguous statement of Ear-man’s rights against Burroughs. As stated by the Kansas Supreme Court, “it would be anomalous if . commercial transactions [which are entered into by the device of a lease rather than a sale] were subject to different rules of law than other transactions which tend to have the identical economic result.”
Atlas Industries, Inc. v. National Cash Register Co., supra,
216
Kan. at 218, 531 P.2d at 45 (discussing and approving of the reasoning in
Hertz Commercial Leasing Corp. v. Transportation Credit Clearing House,
59 Misc.2d 226, 298 N.Y.S.2d 392 (1969),
rev’d on other grounds,
64 Misc.2d 910, 316 N.Y.S.2d 585 (1st Dept. 1970)).
III. Application
Subject to Earman’s claim of unconscionability, our remaining task is to apply the terms and conditions of the ESC to Earman’s breach of warranty claims. The ESC contains an integration provision.
See
note 8
supra,
for text. We find the integration provision sufficient to prevent the consideration of prior representations by Burroughs. Several other Courts which have construed Burroughs’s ESC unanimously agree.
Bakal
v.
Burroughs Corp.,
74 Misc.2d 202, 343 N.Y.S.2d 541 (1972);
Investors Premium Corp.
v.
Burroughs Corp.,
389 F.Supp. 39 (D.S.C.1974) (S.C.);
Byrd Tractor, Inc. v. Burroughs Corp.,
Civ.No. 77-30-A (U.S.E.D.Va., Aug. 8,1977) (Va.). We are therefore confined to the four corners of the ESC (subsequent documents not being inconsistent), the interpretation of which is a matter of law.
Percival Construction Co.
v.
Miller & Miller Auctioneers, Inc.,
532 F.2d 166, 171 (10th Cir. 1976);
Citicorp Leasing, Inc. v. Allied Institutional Distributors, Inc.,
454 F.Supp. 511 (W.D. Okla.1977).
The ESC contains terms disclaiming warranties and limiting liability.
See
notes 6 & 7
supra,
for text. Earman does not argue that these terms are ineffective. The terms are in type larger than the surrounding terms and meet U.C.C. § l-201(10)’s definition of being “conspicuous.”
The implied warranties disclaimer includes the word “merchantability.” Thus the implied warranties disclaimer fully complies with the requirements of U.C.C. § 2-316(2).
The disclaimer of express warranties also complies with the Code’s requirements. U.C.C. § 2-316(l).
Likewise the limitation of liability terms are effective. The ESC included a three-month maintenance and repair warranty. Consequently, the requirements of U.C.C. § 2 — 719
are met. Our resolution of this essentially uncontested point is again supported by other Courts.
Bakal v. Burroughs Corp., supra ; Investors Premium Corp. v. Burroughs Corp., supra; Westfield Chemical Corp. v. Burroughs Corp.,
21 U.C.C.Rep. 1293 (Mass.Super.Ct. 1977);
Byrd Tractor, Inc. v. Burroughs Corp., supra. See Delta Air Lines, Inc. v. McDonnell Douglas Corp.,
503 F.2d 239 (5th Cir. 1974);
Wyatt Industries, Inc. v. Publicker Industries, Inc.,
420 F.2d 454 (5th Cir. 1969);
W. R.
Weaver
Co. v. Burroughs Corp.,
580 S.W.2d 76 (Tex.Civ.App.1979).
Because of the ESC's exculpatory provisions, Earman’s claims must fail unless those provisions are unconscionable. It is Earman’s last contention that the ESC’s
exculpatory provisions are unconscionable and therefore recovery against Burroughs is possible.
IV. Unconscionability
Based on the documents and the stipulated and admitted facts, Earman claims that the ESC’s exculpatory provisions are unconscionable as a matter of law.
The burden of proof for this affirmative defense is on Earman.
Mobile America Corp. v. Howard,
307 So.2d 507, 508 (Fla.App.1975). Earman contends that there are sufficient facts to show overreaching and unfair conduct by Burroughs, rendering the ESC’s provisions unconscionable.
Unconscionability is allegedly shown by the relatively short period between signing of the ESC and the lease; the fact that there were only two or three meetings between Earman and Burroughs’s representative prior to the signings; and the fact that Earman was in the business of selling oil and oil products and was therefore presumably unfamiliar with computers. Earman asserts that those bare facts fulfill all but the last two considerations necessary for unconscionability under
Potomac Electric Power Co. v. Westinghouse Electric Corp.,
385 F.Supp. 572 (D.D.C.1974),
rev’d & remanded on other grounds
527 F.2d 853 (D.C. Cir.1975):
(i) examination of the negotiation process as to length of time in dealing; (ii) the length of time for deliberations; (iii) the experience or astuteness of the parties; (iv) whether counsel reviewed the contract; and (v) whether the buyer was a reluctant purchaser.
The facts asserted by Earman are not sufficient to show unconscionability. The number of meetings between the parties by itself indicates nothing about the length, nature, or fairness of negotiations. The period of time between the signing of documents does not mean that Earman’s deliberations concerning the transaction were limited to that period. Nor does Ear-man’s involvement in the oil industry impune the experience or astuteness of its negotiator. Earman has not shown a lack of legal guidance and if anything the record suggests Earman was a willing party to the transaction.
The procedural sort of unconscionability alleged by Earman requires a showing-of overreaching or sharp practices by the seller and ignorance or inexperience on the buyer’s part, resulting in a lack of meaningful bargaining by the parties.
See generally
J. White & R. Summers,
supra
§ 4-3. In commercial settings such as the instant one, businessmen are presumed to act at arms length.
Westfield Chemical Corp. v. Burroughs Corp., supra,
21 U.C.C. Rep. at 1296;
K-Lines, Inc. v. Roberts Motor Co.,
273 Or. 242, 541 P.2d 1378, 1384 (1975);
K & C, Inc. v. Westinghouse Electric Corp.',
437 Pa. 303, 308, 263 A.2d 390, 393 (1970).
See also Investors Premium Corp. v. Burroughs Corp., supra,
389 F.Supp. at 45. Especially in light of that presumption, Earman has fallen far short of proving unconscionability.
AFFIRMED.