Management Systems Associates, Inc. v. McDonnell Douglas Corporation

762 F.2d 1161, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 29298
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMarch 1, 1985
Docket83-2128
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 762 F.2d 1161 (Management Systems Associates, Inc. v. McDonnell Douglas Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Management Systems Associates, Inc. v. McDonnell Douglas Corporation, 762 F.2d 1161, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 29298 (4th Cir. 1985).

Opinion

DONALD RUSSELL, Circuit Judge:

This action is one in the diversity jurisdiction for (1) the recovery of additional royalty payments allegedly due the plaintiff (hereafter MSA) by the defendant (hereafter McAUTO) 1 under a contract between the parties, and for (2) a declaratory judgment construing specific anti-competitive language in that contract. In its response to the action, McAUTO asserted certain defenses including a number of counterclaims for alleged breaches of the contract on the part of MSA. The action proceeded to trial before a jury and, at the conclusion of the testimony, the district judge granted MSA’s motion for a directed verdict against all of MeAUTO’s counterclaims, save one not involved in this appeal. He also submitted to the jury the proper construction of the disputed provision in the contract under MSA’s declaratory judgment claim. The jury found in favor of MSA on the declaratory judgment action and returned a verdict in the amount of Two Hundred, Fifty-Six Thousand, Five Hundred ($256,-500) Dollars, on MSA’s claim for additional royalties. The jury denied any relief to McAUTO on its one counterclaim which was submitted to it by the district judge. After unsuccessfully moving for judgment notwithstanding the verdict (n.o.v.) and for a new trial, McAUTO has appealed from the judgment entered in favor of MSA. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

The facts giving rise to this suit are in many particulars undisputed. The parties were both providers of computerized hospital accounting systems. McAUTO’s product consisted of large centralized “mainframe” computers, while MSA had developed a system using smaller, decentralized “minicomputer” software. 2 In the late 1970s, the minicomputer system had developed considerable customer appeal. McAUTO began planning to move into that field by marketing a minicomputer system of its own. With this in mind, it had acquired a manufacturer of minicomputer hardware. It, however, lacked software for its minicomputer hardware. Rather than producing its own software, McAUTO negotiated with MSA for the purchase of software from the latter under a licensing-purchasing arrangement. It is McAUTO’s argument that, since the parties were competitors, the investigation by McAUTO of MSA’s software preliminary to entering into any agreement with MSA was restricted. Because of this limitation on its investigation McAUTO’s position was that it was forced to rely largely on MSA’s own representations about the character and adaptability of the latter’s software. In any event, the negotiations between the parties resulted in two related contracts, one a “Purchase Contract” covering the acquisition of the required software by McAUTO from MSA and the other a “Service Contract” in connection with such software. In this appeal we are only concerned with the Purchase Contract.

Under the Purchase Agreement, MSA agreed to sell, deliver, and license to McAUTO certain software, specifically described and identified in an exhibit attached and made a part of the Agreement. The *1164 license covered MSA’s Hospital System together with any improvements thereof as well as the exclusive right to market such system subject to an exception in favor of outstanding contracts of MSA with a few identified hospitals. Under the Agreement MSA was also to grant McAUTO “a nonexclusive, non-transferable, perpetual, paid-up license for its ‘Tool-bag’ software.” In payment for such purchase and license, McAUTO agreed to pay MSA Two Hundred Thousand ($200,000) Dollars, upon execution of the Purchase Agreement and One Hundred, Sixty Three Thousand ($163,-000) Dollars, ninety (90) days following execution of such Agreement. In addition McAUTO agreed to make “Additional Payments” of royalties. It was contemplated that McAUTO would transfer, lease, and license the software. The royalty section of the Agreement applied to both sales and leases. In the instance of a lease, the Agreement provided (1) that a copy of the lease when executed was to be promptly furnished MSA and (2) that the “royalty” thereon was to be paid in advance on the sum of the monthly payments to be made under the lease much the same as if the lease had been a sale. 3 McAUTO proposed, and MSA agreed, that McAUTO should offer either to make an outright sale in the beginning or to do substantially the same by using a lease as a quasi-credit transaction, with payments spread over the period of the lease.

There were other provisions in the Agreement, whereby MSA bound itself under its license not to compete with McAUTO for a designated period of time. If, however, McAUTO did not reach a “minimum cumulative Bed Quota” in sales or leases for a particular year and failed to make the payment provided in lieu of attaining said “Quota,” McAUTO was to grant MSA a “non-exclusive, paid-up license to MSA Hospital System in the general hospital market.” Finally, MSA warranted that on the closing date it would have good and marketable title to all the properties and assets being sold to McAUTO and that there would be no claims against such assets preventing the transfer to McAUTO of clear title to said assets.

The two claims of MSA, one relating to the extent of its right to compete in “the general hospital market” on failure of McAUTO to reach its “Quota” under the Agreement and the other relating to the obligation of McAUTO to pay additional royalties to MSA, were based on the interpretations of certain provisions of the Agreement. In its first claim represented by its action for a declaratory judgment, MSA contended that the provision of the Agreement giving it the right to compete upon the failure of McAUTO to reach its “Quota” was not intended to confine it strictly to the solicitation of “end-users” or the hospitals, but was intended to be broad enough to embrace the solicitation of hospital suppliers. 4 McAUTO’s construction was to the contrary. In its view MSA acquired a right to compete in marketing only with hospitals themselves as a result of McAUTO’s failure to reach its “Quota.” The resolution of this dispute turned on the construction of the term, “general hospital market” in the Agreement. Under the evidence at trial and the language of the Agreement, the district court found the term in question to be ambiguous; it therefore submitted the interpretation of the language to the jury. The jury found in favor of MSA’s construction.

MSA’s other claim was for additional royalties. MSA based such claim on its *1165 construction of the term “paid-up license fee” in the royalty Article of the Purchase Agreement. MSA’s position was that royalties under a lease of the system and its software were by the terms of the Agreement to be paid by McAUTO not on the gross sums to be paid by the lessee to McAUTO for the term of the lease itself but for the term of the so-called “useful life” of the system, which varied, under MSA’s contention, from eight to twelve years. McAUTO, on the other hand, took the position that the obligation to pay such royalties extended only to the gross sums payable under the lease, discounted by excluding therefrom “financing charges.” Under its construction, the term “paid-up” meant simply that the license fee under a lease was “paid up for the time [the lessees] had the right to use [the system]” under the lease-license.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
762 F.2d 1161, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 29298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/management-systems-associates-inc-v-mcdonnell-douglas-corporation-ca4-1985.