SATELLITE BROADCASTING v. Telefonica De Espana

807 F. Supp. 218, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15668, 1992 WL 288145
CourtDistrict Court, D. Puerto Rico
DecidedOctober 13, 1992
DocketCiv. No. 90-1662(PG)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 807 F. Supp. 218 (SATELLITE BROADCASTING v. Telefonica De Espana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SATELLITE BROADCASTING v. Telefonica De Espana, 807 F. Supp. 218, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15668, 1992 WL 288145 (prd 1992).

Opinion

807 F.Supp. 218 (1992)

SATELLITE BROADCASTING CABLE, INC., et al., Plaintiffs,
v.
TELEFÓNICA DE ESPAÑA, S.A., et al., Defendants.

Civ. No. 90-1662(PG).

United States District Court, D. Puerto Rico.

October 13, 1992.

Miguel J. Rodríguez Marxuach, San Juan, PR, for plaintiffs.

Arturo J. García-Solá, San Juan, PR, for defendants.

OPINION AND ORDER

PEREZ-GIMENEZ, District Judge.

I. Introduction

The third in a trilogy of opinions,[1] this case had its genesis on a failed venture which sought to create a Spanish language television news programming for broadcast to audiences across the United States. Following the issuance of summary judgment *219 on all contractual causes of action for Telefónica de España, S.A., and Telefónica International, S.A. (together "defendants"), and summary judgment on all pre-contractual causes of action arising from the second set of negotiations or "Spring Negotiations" for Satellite Broadcasting Cable, Inc., and Multimedia (together "plaintiffs"), see Satellite II, 807 F.Supp. 210, 217-18, and Supplemental Order dated May 21, 1992, the parties attended an in camera settlement conference. In accordance with the instructions of this Court, the parties have submitted memoranda of law on the proper scope of damages for willful and malicious termination or withdrawal from pre-contractual negotiations. For the reasons more fully set out below, this Court finds that plaintiffs are entitled to recover reliance but not expectation damages.

II. Opinion on Reconsideration dated April 7, 1992

In Satellite II, this Court recognized that under Producciones Tommy Muñiz v. Copan, 13 Official Translations 664 (1982), "an unjust withdrawal [or termination from] the pre-contractual phase [of negotiations] may result in extra-contractual liability under Article 1802 of the Civil Code, 31 L.P.R.A. § 514." Satellite II, 807 F.Supp. at 216-17. After finding a letter written February 10, 1989, irrefutable evidence that defendants were "in bad faith and in violation of their duty to exert best efforts when ... negotiations were [reinitiated] in February," this Court held that "although negotiations had not developed to the point where a contract [came] into existence, defendant's behavior was in violation of precontractual duties of good faith and best efforts." Id. 14. Therefore, summary judgment for all extra-contractual causes of actions stemming from the Spring Negotiations was entered in favor of plaintiffs. See Supplemental Order dated May 21, 1992.

III. The Scope of Damages in Precontractual Negotiations

The issue that troubles the Court today is one that the local Supreme Court has carefully side-stepped over the last ten years. Even the Supreme Court's decision in Copan stands out as a remote, ill-fitted outpost in the uncharted civil code sea of precontractual liability when it comes to assisting this Court in its determination of the proper scope of damages. In Copan, the Court recognized that extra-contractual liability is incurred and damages may be awarded for the unjust withdrawal or termination of pre-contractual negotiations under a variety of theories which include, but are not limited to, fault, dolus, fraud, lack of good faith and abuse of law. Copan at 679. In doing so, however, Copan remained painfully aware of the competing interests subsumed within its holding — the need to balance the parties' right to contract with the duty to negotiate in good faith:

It is a well known fact that nobody is under the obligation to enter into a contract. One of the consequences of this basic principle of the Law of Obligations is that the parties are not bound to proceed with the negotiations until a contract is perfected, but rather they are free to contract or to withdraw as it best suits their interests.
Preliminary negotiations, however, generate a social relationship that imposes on the parties the duty to act in good faith, which, as Díez-Picazo has correctly observed, "does not only govern legal relationships already established, but also those derived from a simple social contract." (Citations omitted).

Copan at 676.

Having recognized that unjustified withdrawal or termination of precontractual negotiations constitutes a tort under Article 1802 of the Civil Code, 31 L.P.R.A. § 5141, Copan stares into the abyss and falls short of a definite pronouncement on the scope of damages, stating instead that "the problem [needs to be analyzed by] bearing in mind what legal concept — fault, dolus, fraud, good faith, abuse of law, or other general principle of law — is the most adequate to serve as legal ground on which to solve the case." Copan at 679-680. At the moment of truth — that of defining the *220 proper scope of damages — the Court shies away from the altar.

To be sure, and as will be seen below, numerous Civil Code commentators have made pronouncements on the issue of the proper scope of damages but the local Supreme Court has yet to take a stand.[2]

IV. The Position of the Parties

A. Plaintiffs' Argument

The parties' positions are as divergent as night and day. Plaintiffs argue that a party who willfully and maliciously withdraws from precontractual negotiations is liable for "negative" or reliance damages while a party who merely negotiates in bad faith is liable for "positive" or expectation damages. See Plaintiffs' Memorandum of Law, p. 5. In support of this proposition, plaintiffs cite Spanish commentator Alberto Manzanares, who states that:

"[I]nitiating the negotiations with the purpose of causing harm, constitutes by itself an illicit act that clearly can be encompassed within the concept of extracontractual [tort] or aquiline liability." (Translation ours).

Plaintiffs' Memorandum, p. 6, citing, Manzanares, Alberto, La Responsabilidad Pre-Contractual en la Hipótesis de Ruptura Injustificada de las Negociaciones Preliminares, XXXVIII Anuario de Derecho Civil 687, 689 (III, 1984).

Plaintiffs' position also finds support in Alfonso De Cossío y Corral's treatise on the subject, which favors the award of damages in cases where the party's willful misconduct results in the termination of precontractual negotiations:

Whenever [willful misconduct] results in harmful consequences, an action for total indemnification for willful misconduct will arise, in the terms that we have studied in chapter 1 of this work. The indemnification will therefore not be limited to the merely negative contractual interest; but it will be extensive to the harms and injuries of every kind, foreseeable and non foreseeable that could have followed the willful misconduct or omission. (Translation ours). (Emphasis supplied by plaintiffs).

Plaintiffs' Memorandum, p. 7, citing, Alfonso De Cossío y Corral's El Dolo en el Derecho Civil at 301 (1955).

Further support comes from two unlikely sources: a dissenting opinion by Associate Justice Díaz-Cruz in Copan and the final settlement of the Copan case in the lower courts. In Copan, Associate Justice Díaz-Cruz, embraces the distinction between unjust and malicious withdrawal from precontractual negotiations which plaintiff wishes to impress on this Court and recognizes two types of liability:

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