Earman Oil Company, Inc. And Courtesy House, Inc., Florida Corporations v. Burroughs Corporation, a Michigan Corporation

625 F.2d 1291, 30 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 849, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 13881
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 19, 1980
Docket78-1785
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 625 F.2d 1291 (Earman Oil Company, Inc. And Courtesy House, Inc., Florida Corporations v. Burroughs Corporation, a Michigan Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Earman Oil Company, Inc. And Courtesy House, Inc., Florida Corporations v. Burroughs Corporation, a Michigan Corporation, 625 F.2d 1291, 30 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 849, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 13881 (5th Cir. 1980).

Opinion

JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge:

Inappropriate for certification because of the unusual posture of the issues and their straightforward, settled nature, 1 this case takes us down the Florida law spur of Erie R. R. v. Tompkins. 2 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.”). 3

*1293 A three-party transaction is the subject of this appeal. Earman Oil Company was the user of a Burroughs Model L 8800-100 computer. 4 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. 5 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 *1294 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, 6 damage limitations, 7 and integration provisions. 8

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. 9 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. 10 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.

*1295 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, 11 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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625 F.2d 1291, 30 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 849, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 13881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/earman-oil-company-inc-and-courtesy-house-inc-florida-corporations-v-ca5-1980.