HUG, Circuit Judge:
This is a contract action arising out of the sale of a computer system. The plaintiff, Nixdorf Computer, Inc., is an Illinois corporation with its principal place of business in Chicago, Illinois. The defendant, Jet Forwarding, Inc., is a California corporation with its principal place of business in Santa Ana, California. Jurisdiction is based upon diversity of citizenship under 28 U.S.C. § 1332.
Nixdorf as seller, and Jet as buyer, executed a written contract on August 27, 1974 for the sale of a computer system, including both the hardware and the software computer programs necessary to enable the computer to meet the needs of the buyer. On November 19, 1974, the parties executed a supplementary contract for an additional
piece of equipment, a ledger reader, to be utilized with the computer. The computer system with the supplemental equipment was sold for a combined price of $58,646.00. Jet paid a total of $6,214.86 as a deposit and a balance of $52,431.14 was owed to Nix-dorf. The contracts were to be performed in California and both parties have agreed that California law is applicable.
The contract of August 27, 1974 and the supplement of November 19, 1974 were written on identical forms provided by the seller, Nixdorf. The form is entitled “Purchase Agreement” and states on its face that the agreement is subject to the terms and conditions set forth on the reverse of the document. On the reverse of the form are 21 provisions which govern the terms of the purchase.
The computer system was shipped to Jet, which took possession on January 14, 1975. About two weeks later, on January 30,1975, a Jet employee telephoned Nixdorf to explain that Jet was in financial difficulty and therefore could not and would not perform its duty to pay the balance of the purchase price. He advised Nixdorf to repossess the computer system for Nixdorf’s protection.
On February 3, 1975, with Jet’s consent, agents of Nixdorf did repossess the equipment. Nixdorf subsequently returned the hardware to its inventory of new equipment, apparently without making any effort to separately identify it. At least some of it was ultimately sold to other customers. At the trial, Nixdorf’s sole witness was unable to say whether any of the equipment still remained unsold. After repossessing the equipment, Nixdorf made no effort to notify Jet of the subsequent resale or resales.
Nixdorf then sued Jet for damages. The main contention of Nixdorf is that it is entitled to seller’s damages for nonacceptance or repudiation in accordance with § 2708 of the California Commercial Code (U.C.C., § 2-708.)
Basically, the measure of damages specified in this section is the difference between the market price at the time of tender and the unpaid contract price or, in the alternative, the loss of profits to the seller, whichever is greater.
Jet, on the other hand, contends that it had accepted the goods and taken possession of them, and that the repossession of the goods by Nixdorf was a realization upon a security interest reserved in the goods under the terms of the contract. Jet further contends that Nixdorf is limited to the remedy of a security interest holder under § 9504 of the California Commercial Code (U.C.C., § 9-504).
This section has been
construed in California to preclude the security holder from any recovery of a deficiency when the holder fails to notify the debtor in writing of a resale.
Atlas Thrift Co.
v.
Horan,
27 Cal.App.3d 999, 104 Cal.Rptr. 315, 59 A.L.R.3d 389 (1972).
The district court accepted Jet’s view and entered judgment for the defendant, together with an award of $5,000 in attorney’s fees to Jet as the prevailing party.
We affirm.
The judgment depends upon the construction of the contract of the parties. The case was tried upon stipulated facts and the testimony of one witness produced by the plaintiff, the branch manager of Nixdorf’s Los Angeles office. The witness testified that the written contract on Nixdorf’s form constituted the entire agreement between the parties, including both the hardware and the software; that there was no other agreement between the parties; and that there was no contrary oral understanding.
We must therefore look to the provisions of the written purchase agreement to determine the rights and duties of the parties. Cal.Civ.Code, §§ 1637, 1638 and 1639. If uncertainty exists, the language of the contract is to be construed most strongly against the party who caused the uncertainty to exist. Cal.Civ.Code, § 1654. Since the purchase agreement was Nixdorf’s form agreement, uncertainty or ambiguity must be resolved in favor of Jet and against Nixdorf.
Two of the paragraphs on the reverse of the purchase agreement provided:
2. Purchaser hereby grants to the Seller a security interest and title shall remain with seller on the equipment.
This security interest shall not terminate until all sums due under this Agreement are fully paid. .
7. If Purchaser shall fail to make payment when due, Purchaser agrees to return equipment to Seller and Seller may without notice or demand and without legal process enter the premises and take possession of said property, retaining as liquidated damages all payments made thereon. .
Had Jet repudiated the contract pri- or to the delivery and acceptance of the computer system, it is clear that Nixdorf could have invoked the seller’s remedies provided in Division 2 of the California Commercial Code (§§ 2701-2725) and could properly have sold the computer system and sought damages as provided in § 2708 of the California Commercial Code. However, once the buyer lawfully obtained possession of the goods, then, barring a new agreement, any interest the seller had in the computer system was governed by Division 9 of the California Commercial Code.
The purchase agreement provided that Nixdorf retained a security interest in the computer system until the balance of the purchase price was paid. The buyer lawfully obtained possession; and the right to repossess, dispose of the collateral and apply the pro
ceeds was therefore governed by § 9504 of the California Commercial Code.
At the time of the repossession, the parties could, of course, have reached a new agreement concerning the disposition of the computer system and its effect upon the outstanding balance of the purchase price. The evidence reveals no such new agreement, nor any agreement to rescind the contract. Under the terms of paragraph 7 of the purchase agreement, quoted above, Jet, upon failing to make payment when due, was obligated to return the equipment and Nixdorf had the right to enter the premises and take possession of the property. This is exactly what took place.
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HUG, Circuit Judge:
This is a contract action arising out of the sale of a computer system. The plaintiff, Nixdorf Computer, Inc., is an Illinois corporation with its principal place of business in Chicago, Illinois. The defendant, Jet Forwarding, Inc., is a California corporation with its principal place of business in Santa Ana, California. Jurisdiction is based upon diversity of citizenship under 28 U.S.C. § 1332.
Nixdorf as seller, and Jet as buyer, executed a written contract on August 27, 1974 for the sale of a computer system, including both the hardware and the software computer programs necessary to enable the computer to meet the needs of the buyer. On November 19, 1974, the parties executed a supplementary contract for an additional
piece of equipment, a ledger reader, to be utilized with the computer. The computer system with the supplemental equipment was sold for a combined price of $58,646.00. Jet paid a total of $6,214.86 as a deposit and a balance of $52,431.14 was owed to Nix-dorf. The contracts were to be performed in California and both parties have agreed that California law is applicable.
The contract of August 27, 1974 and the supplement of November 19, 1974 were written on identical forms provided by the seller, Nixdorf. The form is entitled “Purchase Agreement” and states on its face that the agreement is subject to the terms and conditions set forth on the reverse of the document. On the reverse of the form are 21 provisions which govern the terms of the purchase.
The computer system was shipped to Jet, which took possession on January 14, 1975. About two weeks later, on January 30,1975, a Jet employee telephoned Nixdorf to explain that Jet was in financial difficulty and therefore could not and would not perform its duty to pay the balance of the purchase price. He advised Nixdorf to repossess the computer system for Nixdorf’s protection.
On February 3, 1975, with Jet’s consent, agents of Nixdorf did repossess the equipment. Nixdorf subsequently returned the hardware to its inventory of new equipment, apparently without making any effort to separately identify it. At least some of it was ultimately sold to other customers. At the trial, Nixdorf’s sole witness was unable to say whether any of the equipment still remained unsold. After repossessing the equipment, Nixdorf made no effort to notify Jet of the subsequent resale or resales.
Nixdorf then sued Jet for damages. The main contention of Nixdorf is that it is entitled to seller’s damages for nonacceptance or repudiation in accordance with § 2708 of the California Commercial Code (U.C.C., § 2-708.)
Basically, the measure of damages specified in this section is the difference between the market price at the time of tender and the unpaid contract price or, in the alternative, the loss of profits to the seller, whichever is greater.
Jet, on the other hand, contends that it had accepted the goods and taken possession of them, and that the repossession of the goods by Nixdorf was a realization upon a security interest reserved in the goods under the terms of the contract. Jet further contends that Nixdorf is limited to the remedy of a security interest holder under § 9504 of the California Commercial Code (U.C.C., § 9-504).
This section has been
construed in California to preclude the security holder from any recovery of a deficiency when the holder fails to notify the debtor in writing of a resale.
Atlas Thrift Co.
v.
Horan,
27 Cal.App.3d 999, 104 Cal.Rptr. 315, 59 A.L.R.3d 389 (1972).
The district court accepted Jet’s view and entered judgment for the defendant, together with an award of $5,000 in attorney’s fees to Jet as the prevailing party.
We affirm.
The judgment depends upon the construction of the contract of the parties. The case was tried upon stipulated facts and the testimony of one witness produced by the plaintiff, the branch manager of Nixdorf’s Los Angeles office. The witness testified that the written contract on Nixdorf’s form constituted the entire agreement between the parties, including both the hardware and the software; that there was no other agreement between the parties; and that there was no contrary oral understanding.
We must therefore look to the provisions of the written purchase agreement to determine the rights and duties of the parties. Cal.Civ.Code, §§ 1637, 1638 and 1639. If uncertainty exists, the language of the contract is to be construed most strongly against the party who caused the uncertainty to exist. Cal.Civ.Code, § 1654. Since the purchase agreement was Nixdorf’s form agreement, uncertainty or ambiguity must be resolved in favor of Jet and against Nixdorf.
Two of the paragraphs on the reverse of the purchase agreement provided:
2. Purchaser hereby grants to the Seller a security interest and title shall remain with seller on the equipment.
This security interest shall not terminate until all sums due under this Agreement are fully paid. .
7. If Purchaser shall fail to make payment when due, Purchaser agrees to return equipment to Seller and Seller may without notice or demand and without legal process enter the premises and take possession of said property, retaining as liquidated damages all payments made thereon. .
Had Jet repudiated the contract pri- or to the delivery and acceptance of the computer system, it is clear that Nixdorf could have invoked the seller’s remedies provided in Division 2 of the California Commercial Code (§§ 2701-2725) and could properly have sold the computer system and sought damages as provided in § 2708 of the California Commercial Code. However, once the buyer lawfully obtained possession of the goods, then, barring a new agreement, any interest the seller had in the computer system was governed by Division 9 of the California Commercial Code.
The purchase agreement provided that Nixdorf retained a security interest in the computer system until the balance of the purchase price was paid. The buyer lawfully obtained possession; and the right to repossess, dispose of the collateral and apply the pro
ceeds was therefore governed by § 9504 of the California Commercial Code.
At the time of the repossession, the parties could, of course, have reached a new agreement concerning the disposition of the computer system and its effect upon the outstanding balance of the purchase price. The evidence reveals no such new agreement, nor any agreement to rescind the contract. Under the terms of paragraph 7 of the purchase agreement, quoted above, Jet, upon failing to make payment when due, was obligated to return the equipment and Nixdorf had the right to enter the premises and take possession of the property. This is exactly what took place.
Thus, as Jet contends, Nixdorf, in repossessing the computer system, was acting under paragraph 7 of the agreement and the provisions of Cal.Comm.Code, § 9504 as a secured party.
After repossessing the computer system, the hardware was placed in Nixdorf’s inventory of new computer hardware and some of the equipment was sold. Nixdorf gave no notice to Jet of any sale, as required by Cal.Comm.Code, § 9504(3). Jet contends that the failure to give such notice precludes recovery for any deficiency.
Nixdorf contends that, even assuming it was limited to a security holder’s remedies, the trial court erred in ruling that its failure to give notice of sale to the debtor barred a judgment for the deficiency. This issue has appeared frequently, because the Uniform Commercial Code itself left it open. The Cal.Comm.Code, § 9504(2), (U.C.C., § 9-504(2)) says that the debtor is “liable for any deficiency” suffered by the secured party upon resale of the goods. The Cal.Comm.Code, § 9504(3) (U.C.C., § 9-504(3)) requires that the secured party given the debtor notice of the resale. Under the California section, the notice must be in writing. The Code does not explain what consequences a secured party will suffer by failing to give the required notice.
The courts have split on the question of whether the right to a deficiency is forfeited by failure to give notice. See White & Summers, Handbook of the Law Under the U.C.C. (1972), § 26-15, pp. 1000-1007; see cases collected in
Clark Leasing Corp. v. White Sands Forest Prod., Inc.,
87 N.M. 451, 535 P.2d 1077, 1081 (1975).
California plainly follows the apparent majority rule, holding that the right to a deficiency is lost when the secured party fails to give proper notice.
Atlas Thrift Co. v. Horan, supra; General Electric Credit Corp. v. Bo-Mar Const. Co.,
72 Cal.App.3d 887, 140 Cal.Rptr. 417 (1977). Since Nixdorf did not give notice here, the trial court was correct in holding that Nixdorf could not recover any deficiency.
Nixdorf’s remaining contentions lack merit. It contends that Jet waived its right to notice under § 9504, and is therefore estopped from asserting that defense. The trial court specifically found that there was no waiver. This finding is supported by the evidence and is not clearly erroneous.
Nixdorf contends that no security agreement was ever intended and that the provisions on the reverse of the contract were mere “boilerplate”. We cannot ignore the language of paragraphs 2 and 7, because that language is clear and unambiguous. “Boilerplate” is, notwithstanding its reputation, language. Absent contrary admissible evidence, it will be given effect. If Nixdorf intended no security interest, it should not have used language creating one.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.