Ohio Calculating, Inc. v. Cpt Corporation, Ohio Calculating, Inc. v. Cpt Corporation

846 F.2d 497, 1988 WL 44134
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 21, 1988
Docket87-5217, 87-5225
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 846 F.2d 497 (Ohio Calculating, Inc. v. Cpt Corporation, Ohio Calculating, Inc. v. Cpt Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ohio Calculating, Inc. v. Cpt Corporation, Ohio Calculating, Inc. v. Cpt Corporation, 846 F.2d 497, 1988 WL 44134 (8th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

LAY, Chief Judge.

I. Background

Ohio Calculating, Inc., a seller and servi-cer of office equipment, was a dealer for CPT Corporation, a manufacturer of word processing equipment, from 1976 until 1982, when CPT terminated Ohio Calculating. After the termination, Ohio Calculating sued CPT for breach of their Dealer Agreement. A jury returned a verdict for Ohio Calculating, finding that CPT breached the following provisions of the Agreement:

(1) II 2.1, requiring CPT to establish fair and equitable dealer performance standards;
(2) ¶ 2.7, requiring CPT to act in a fair and equitable manner after termination and to provide a review of the termination by a review board; and
(3) ¶ 10.8, requiring CPT to negotiate with Ohio Calculating after the termination with respect to the purchase of Ohio Calculating’s business.

The jury also found that CPT breached ¶ 8.7, but this provision is not at issue on appeal because CPT concedes its liability. 1 Finally, the jury found that CPT did not breach ¶ 2.5 of the Dealer Agreement, which gave CPT the right to terminate the Agreement if Ohio Calculating substantially failed to meet sales or service standards. 2

The jury determined that the total damages caused by CPT’s breach of ¶¶ 2.1, 2.7, and 8.7 were $141,820. The verdict form *499 did not direct the jury to apportion these damages. The verdict form did require the jury to determine a specific amount of damages caused by CPT’s breach of ¶ 10.8; the jury set this award at $28,500.

After the jury returned its verdict, the district court 3 entered judgment n.o.v. for CPT on two of the jury’s findings. The court set aside the jury verdict for CPT’s breach of 112.1, which provides:

Fair and equitable standards of Dealer performance will be established by CPT on the basis of actual manufacture and sales of CPT Products, the potential of the Area of Primary Responsibility, and any special circumstances of Dealer and Dealer’s Area of Primary Responsibility. Performance standards and sales quotas have been or will be sent to Dealer by CPT and will be updated annually by CPT.

The trial court reasoned that Ohio Calculating introduced no evidence of recoverable damages suffered as a result of that breach.

The court further set aside the verdict in favor of Ohio Calculating for CPT’s breach of II 2.7, which provides:

In the event of the nonrenewal or termination of this Agreement (for substantial failure to meet sales and service standards, or for any other reason described in Article VIII), CPT and Dealer shall act in a fair, equitable and ethical manner. Dealer shall have the right to submit such nonrenewal or termination for review by a CPT Review Board consisting of three officers from CPT senior management, none of whom shall have been involved in the initial recommendation of termination or nonrenewal. In any review by the Review Board and in any legal proceeding arising out of this Agreement, the burden of proof shall be upon CPT. Violations of law, CPT corporate policy (as set forth in CPT’s Dealer Administrative Manual) or this Agreement which are clearly defined and documented will not require the consultation of the Review Board. However, a report documenting specific violations will be provided to each member of the Review Board as a matter of record.

The trial court reasoned that the exculpatory clause in II 8.9 of the Dealer Agreement barred Ohio Calculating’s recovery under HU 2.1 and 2.7. Ohio Calculating appeals from the judgment n.o.v. entered for CPT on these two counts. 4 Finally, the district court upheld the jury’s verdict that CPT breached 1110.8; CPT cross-appeals from this judgment.

II. Discussion

A. Ohio Calculating’s Appeal

The district court’s grant of judgment n.o.v. in favor of CPT was based primarily on the exculpatory terms of the Dealer Agreement between Ohio Calculating and CPT. Paragraph 8.9 provides:

Termination shall not result in CPT liability to Dealer in any manner for any damage, loss, or expense of any kind, all of which claims are expressly waived. After the date of termination, no commissions shall be due to Dealer for rental payments received thereafter or for subsequent conversion sales of CPT Products.

The district court held that this clause precluded Ohio Calculating from recovering for CPT’s breaches of HH 2.1 and 2.7 because any damages suffered by Ohio Calculating due to those breaches “resulted from” termination and were therefore unrecoverable under the unambiguous terms of ¶ 8.9. 5

*500 Ohio Calculating urges three grounds in support of its argument that the exculpatory clause does not preclude recovery for CPT’s breach of MI 2.1 and 2.7: the clause is inapplicable; the clause is unenforceable because ambiguous; and the clause is unenforceable because it denies Ohio Calculating a minimum adequate recovery. We find Ohio Calculating’s first argument to be dispositive and therefore do not address its remaining contentions.

By its terms, II 8.9 provides only that “[termination shall not result in CPT liability * * (emphasis added). In contrast, the breaches at issue here involved pre-termination and post-termination conduct by CPT. The jury determined, and the district court agreed, that prior to terminating Ohio Calculating, CPT had set unduly and inequitably high performance standards for Ohio Calculating. This conduct would have breached ¶ 2.1 of the parties’ agreement even if CPT had not terminated Ohio Calculating. Similarly, CPT’s breach of II 2.7 was its failure to fulfill certain post -termination obligations. It is irrelevant that the damages that accrued to Ohio Calculating from CPT’s breaches accrued after termination, because H 8.9 precludes only liability resulting from termination, not all damages caused by any of CPT’s conduct. To interpret the clause as urged by CPT would be to reconstruct it to read that after CPT terminates Ohio Calculating, CPT shall not be liable for any damages caused by its termination or by its pre- or post-termination conduct. This interpretation is clearly at odds with the language of the totality of the parties’ agreement and we decline to so distort its meaning. We therefore hold that the exculpatory clause is inapplicable and does not bar Ohio Calculating from recovering for CPT's breaches of 11112.1 and 2.7. We reverse the judgment n.o.v. for CPT and remand for reinstatement of the jury’s verdict.

In doing so, we reject, as did the district court, CPT’s argument that another portion of the Dealer Agreement bars Ohio Calculating’s recovery. CPT points to 1110.9 of the Agreement, which provides that:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
846 F.2d 497, 1988 WL 44134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohio-calculating-inc-v-cpt-corporation-ohio-calculating-inc-v-cpt-ca8-1988.