Special Learning, Inc. v. Step by Step Academy, Inc.

708 F. App'x 842
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 1, 2017
Docket16-3835
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 708 F. App'x 842 (Special Learning, Inc. v. Step by Step Academy, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Special Learning, Inc. v. Step by Step Academy, Inc., 708 F. App'x 842 (6th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

Special Learning, Inc. (“Special Learning”), sued Step by Step Academy, Inc. (“SBSA”), for breach of contract. After an eight-day trial, a jury found that SBSA had breached the parties’ agreement but awarded Special Learning no damages. Although Special Learning did not object at trial, it later claimed in a post-trial motion that the jury’s verdict was inconsistent. The district court deemed this argument waived, however, because Special Learning did not object to the allegedly inconsistent verdict before the jury was discharged. It also found that, regardless of waiver, the jury’s verdict was not inconsistent. Because we agree that Special Learning forfeited any objection to the verdict’s consistency, we affirm.

*843 I.

Special Learning is a software-development company that focuses on educational software. SBSA is a non-profit mental-health center that provides services to children with Autism Spectrum Disorder. SBSA needed updated software so that it could maintain accreditation as a rehabilitation facility. To meet that need, SBSA enlisted Special Learning to develop a suite of software programs.

Although the parties began negotiating the development of software for SBSA in early 2012, they did not memorialize the relevant agreement until December of that year. That agreement was known as the Custom Software Development Agreement (“SDA”). 1 Importantly, the SDA contained an “estimated total contract price,” which was calculated in Exhibits I and II of the SDA. DE 46-2, Page ID 698, 704-06. The estimated! total cost for the project was $597,000.

This estimated cost is the source of the parties’ dispute. Despite the use of the term “estimated,” SBSA purportedly believed that $597,000 represented the final total cost for the software development. That is how the SDA was presented to SBSA’s board of directors, and Karen Chung, Special Learning’s chief executive officer, was in attendance when it was presented as such. An SBSA board member testified that he recalled the SDA contract price as “slightly-under [$]600,000,” and noted that an expenditure' above the agreed-upon amount would have required board approval. DE 126, Page ID 3206.

The SDA’s approximated price turned out to be a woeful underestimate, though not a surprising one to Chung. Chung admitted that, at the time the SDA was signed in December 2012, she knew that $597,000 was insufficient to complete the project and that the “budget was blown.” DE 125, Page ID 3110. Of course, she did not tell SBSA’s board this, despite her presence at its meetings discussing the SDA. Chung, for her part, does claim that she communicated the SDA’s poorly estimated price to SBSA. She first testified that she had emailed her concerns to two SBSA employees, John Solomon and Michele LaMarche, but Chung, despite being given an entire weekend break to conduct a search, could not locate any such email. Chung next testified that she orally communicated the $597,000 price’s inadequacy to SBSA. Yet, no evidence corroborates that assertion, and Solomon and LaMarche each denied that Chung made any such communication.

Pursuant to the SDA, Special Learning was to bill SBSA every thirty days. Special Learning’s invoices, however, presented their own problems. First, there were timing issues. Chung admitted that she “never submitted [Special Learning’s] inVoices on timé.” DE 125, Page ID 3100. This, according to SBSA, led to mistakes in paying those invoices, including paying one invoice too many. Second, the invoices themselves contained little information about what work was being done for SBSA, who was doing the work, or when they did it. And, at trial, Special Learning did not introduce any evidence other than the invoices for proof of the work it allegedly did on SBSA’s behalf. SBSA, for its part, did pay almost $50,000 over the estimated contract price before refusing further payment. SBSA paid every Special Learning invoice from February 2012 to March 2013 — a total of more than $640,000. SBSA has not *844 received any of the software it was promised.

On January 31, 2014, Special Learning sued SBSA in federal court, alleging various contract-law claims. SBSA counterclaimed, claiming breach of contract, unjust enrichment, and common-law conversion against Chung. and Special Learning. Trial began on March 9, 2016, and lasted eight days. The jury was instructed not only on Special Learning’s claims, but also on SBSA’s defenses, including failure to mitigate damages and promissory fraud.

The district court also prepared a general-verdict form with special interrogatories. For Special Learning’s breach-of-the-SDA claim, that form contained four questions. The first read:

Question No. 1: Do you find Defendant breached the [SDA]? If you find the [SDA] agreement was modified by the parties, you must find that the modified [SDA] was breached before finding for Plaintiff on this claim.

DE 98, Page ID 2002. The jury answered “yes” to this question, which required them to skip Questions 2 and 3. See id. Question 4 then asked:

Question No. 4: Consider the amount by which Plaintiff was damaged with respect to the [SDA], Consider any amount by which Plaintiffs damages should be reduced by Plaintiffs own promissory fraud or failure to mitigate damages, if any. Subtract that amount, if any, from Plaintiffs damages. Mark on the line below the total net damages you award to Plaintiff with respect to the [SDA].

Id. at 2003. The jury awarded Special Learning no damages for SBSA’s breach of the SDA.

After reading the verdict, the district court asked Special Learning’s and SBSA’s counsel if either wished for the jury to be polled. Each answered in the negative. The district court then informed the parties that it was going to enter the verdict forms, and that it did not “see any inconsistencies in them.” DE 127, Page ID 3449. Neither party commented on or objected to this statement.

On April 22, 2016, Special Learning and Chung filed a motion to alter or amend the judgment and for a new trial under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 69 (“Rule 69 motion”). In that motion, Special Learning argued that the jury’s verdict was “grossly inadequate and facially inconsistent” because the jury found that SBSA breached the SDA, but it did not award Special Learning any damages. DE 105, Page ID 2236. To find a breach, Special Learning argued, the jury necessarily had to find that Special Learning was damaged by an amount equal to the unpaid invoices.

' The district court denied Special Learning’s Rule 59 motion. 2 It did so based on Special Learning’s failure to object to the verdict before the jury was discharged, which waived any claim of inconsistency. Further, because the jury was instructed to offset Special Learning’s damages by the amount, if any, that SBSA was damaged by Special Learning’s “own promissory fraud or failure to mitigate damages,” the district court held that it would have denied Special Learning’s motion, regardless of the procedural bar, because the jury’s verdict was, in fact, consistent. Special Learning appealed.

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Bluebook (online)
708 F. App'x 842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/special-learning-inc-v-step-by-step-academy-inc-ca6-2017.