FILED
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
July 30, 2008
PUBLISH Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
TENTH CIRCUIT
LEVEL 3 COMMUNICATIONS,
LLC,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v. No. 06-1247
LIEBERT CORPORATION, and
STILLWELL-HANSEN, INC.,
Defendants-Appellants.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO
(D.C. NO. 03-cv-1829-EWN-CBS)
Andrew M. Low (Dale R. Harris, Rudy E. Verner, and Elizabeth H. Titus with
him on the briefs) Davis Graham & Stubbs LLP, Denver, Colorado for
Appellants.
Richard P. Barkley (James S. Hardy with him on the brief) Brownstein Hyatt
Farber Schreck, P.C., Denver, Colorado for Appellee.
Before HARTZ, McKAY, and TYMKOVICH, Circuit Judges.
TYMKOVICH, Circuit Judge.
Level 3 Communications, LLC and Liebert Corporation entered into a
contract in 2000 to purchase several uninterruptible power supply (UPS) systems
for Level 3’s New York City data center. The UPS systems contain batteries to
provide power during outages. When the batteries for the New York order were
delayed by the batteries’ manufacturer (not Liebert), Level 3 pressured Liebert to
come up with an alternative solution. In response, Liebert located another set of
batteries and sold them to Level 3 as a supplement to the existing order.
Level 3 eventually discovered that the additional batteries were
approximately two years old when Liebert sold them. The contract, Level 3
argued, required all equipment sold by Liebert, including UPS system batteries, to
be new. Liebert, however, concluded the contract did not apply to the batteries
and rejected Level 3’s demand to indemnify it against any losses on account of
the old batteries.
Level 3 sued Liebert and Liebert’s agent, Stillwell-Hansen, Inc., 1 alleging
breach of contract and various tort claims. The district court ruled as a matter of
law that the batteries at issue in this case were covered by the contract and
instructed the jury accordingly. The jury found for Level 3 on all claims.
On appeal from the jury’s verdict, Liebert argues the district court erred in
construing the contract to apply to the batteries at issue in this case. We conclude
the contract is ambiguous on whether it applies to the batteries, and thus Liebert
should have been allowed to present extrinsic evidence and argue to the jury that
1
Unless context indicates otherwise, we refer to Defendants collectively as
“Liebert.”
-2-
the contract does not cover the batteries. The district court erred in concluding
otherwise.
Accordingly, we VACATE the jury’s verdict and REVERSE and REMAND
for new trial.
I. Background
A. Factual History
During a three-day jury trial, the parties presented the following evidence.
Equipment for Telecommunications Data Centers
Level 3 creates telecommunications networks—a kind of data highway—
that form the internet’s backbone. To operate its networks, Level 3 builds data
facilities, known as co-location centers, about every 60 miles. Each co-location
center, typically located in a metropolitan area, represents an internet-ready
facility that Level 3 can lease to companies whose businesses rely heavily on
internet connectivity.
By leasing one of Level 3’s co-location centers, a customer can install its
computers and take advantage of Level 3’s networks. Because damage to
computers can lead to loss of data, which carries potentially disastrous
consequences for the center’s lessees, Level 3 offers a host of protections. A high
quality co-location center comes equipped with raised floors and powerful air
conditioning units to prevent overheating; surge protectors to guard against
-3-
equipment damage from sudden spikes in the power supply; and power generators
to ensure against long-term loss of power from a utility.
Most critically, Level 3 installs in each co-location center multiple UPS
systems. UPS systems, as their name suggests, guarantee that absolutely no loss
of power occurs. In the event of a power outage from the utility company, power
generators take over, but only after the initial 7 to 15 seconds that it takes for
them to start. In this short interval, when no other power source is available, a
UPS system ensures that all critical components of a co-location facility—for
example, data storage devices—continue to receive power. Not surprisingly, one
of UPS systems’ main components are their batteries, which contain the power
these systems need to function.
Liebert manufactures various equipment used in co-location centers.
Among other things, Liebert manufactures UPS systems, although not the
accompanying batteries. Those are produced by GNB Technologies (GNB),
among other battery manufacturers. Stillwell-Hansen is Liebert’s authorized sales
representative and represented Liebert in its business transactions with Level 3.
The Agreement Between Level 3 and Liebert
In December 1999, Level 3 and Liebert signed a basic purchase agreement
(Agreement) for buying Liebert “hardware[,] referred to as the ‘Products’” in the
Agreement. Aplt. App. 56. The Products to which the Agreement applies “and
other terms and conditions relevant thereto shall be described in a Product and
-4-
Pricing Attachment to be executed by the parties hereto (the ‘P&P
Attachments’).” Id. The P&P Attachment accompanying the Agreement lists
various hardware, including UPS systems. The batteries, however, are not
specifically mentioned as one of the Products, although without a battery a UPS
system loses its functionality.
The Agreement also contains Liebert’s general warranty for the Products.
Liebert “represents and warrants that all Products . . . purchased and delivered
hereunder shall be new, of good quality and workmanship, and shall be free from
defects in material and workmanship.” Id. at 61. But the “warranty for third-
party accessories shall be limited to those provided by such third parties.” Id.
(emphasis added). The Agreement does not define the term “third-party
accessories.”
After entering into the Agreement, Level 3 purchased from Liebert
somewhere between 50 and 100 UPS systems in the first half of 2000 alone. All
of these orders included batteries, which were shipped from the third-party
battery manufacturer directly to Level 3’s job sites. At the sites, Level 3’s
contractors installed the batteries and connected them to Liebert’s UPS systems.
In every order, the batteries were brand new.
July 2000 Order for UPS Systems and Batteries
In 1999 and 2000, in the midst of the dot-com boom when demand for co-
location facilities was high, Level 3 was developing a co-location project in a
-5-
New York City building, known as the Mondo Condo. An eleven-story building,
the Mondo Condo was to provide several co-location centers on different floors,
each leased to a different customer. This case centers around equipment ordered
for the seventh floor.
For that floor, on July 11, 2000 Level 3 ordered from Liebert a number of
UPS systems. As part of this order, Level 3 also purchased UPS system batteries
rated for 15 minutes of ride-through time, which is the specification indicating
how long a battery can carry power to a UPS system in the event of a power
outage. As with all previous orders, Liebert was to ship the UPS systems and the
battery manufacturer was to ship the batteries directly to the Mondo Condo,
where Level 3’s contractor would assemble them.
Keith Driscoll, a Stillwell-Hansen employee, handled sales for the Mondo
Condo site. On September 27, 2000, at a weekly meeting between Level 3 and
Liebert, Driscoll informed Anthony Sirotka, Level 3’s project manager for the
Mondo Condo, that the batteries order would be delayed until March 2001. The
battery manufacturer was about six months behind in production because of the
dot-com boom. Sirotka became very upset, shouted and cursed at Driscoll, and
demanded that Driscoll find replacement batteries within a matter of hours.
According to Driscoll’s testimony, Sirotka even suggested that a ride-through
time shorter than 15 minutes would suffice if Driscoll could quickly locate
-6-
replacement batteries. But Sirotka and other Level 3 representatives testified that
Driscoll was the one to suggest a shorter, six-minute alternative.
Still on September 27, right after the meeting, Driscoll was able to locate
four six-minute batteries to replace the delayed order of 15-minute batteries. The
six-minute batteries were in storage after a cancelled order, and some were up to
two years old, but Driscoll also learned the batteries were in good condition.
Immediately after he located the six-minute batteries, Driscoll sent an email to
Sirotka. In that email, Driscoll noted the $156,828 “deduct to change the battery
from GNB 15 minute to the 6 minute GNB,” and also mentioned “[t]his new
battery can be on site in four weeks.” Id. at 1615.
Although Sirotka and Driscoll both testified that Sirotka had never asked
about the replacement batteries’ age or storage conditions, their testimonies
diverge regarding what Driscoll had disclosed about the batteries. According to
Driscoll’s testimony, he had specifically told Sirotka on September 27—as well as
repeating the same to Sirotka and other Level 3 representatives during the next-
day conference call—that the batteries were coming from storage because of a
cancelled order, and were up to two years old but in good condition. Sirotka, on
the other hand, testified Driscoll had never explained the six-minute batteries
were anything but factory-fresh, coming to Level 3 directly from the
manufacturer. In fact, Sirotka and his two managers at Level 3 all testified they
had understood Driscoll’s use of the word “new” in reference to the six-minute
-7-
batteries to mean the batteries would be brand-new, just like all other batteries
Level 3 had been ordering from Liebert.
Approximately two weeks later, on October 6, 2000, Driscoll sent Sirotka
another email. In the email, Driscoll explained Level 3’s two options regarding
the six-minute batteries. He told Sirotka, “If you [sic] intention is to use both
batteries, you will need to buy these in addition to the original order,” quoting a
total price of $448,280. Id. at 1619. If, on the other hand, Level 3 “want[s] to
just replace the battery . . . it will be a deduct,” just as Driscoll had explained in
the September 27 email. Id. Sirotka’s same-day response instructed Driscoll to
“order the 6 minute batteries ASAP” and to “retain our original order for the 15
minute batteries which will need to be installed when they arrive.” Id.
Based on this email exchange, Driscoll understood the six-minute batteries
to represent merely a temporary solution, to be replaced with the 15-minute
batteries when they arrive. That understanding was consistent with what Driscoll
subsequently learned in the September 28 conference call with Level 3
representatives, during which they discussed the temporary nature of the six-
minute batteries solution. Moreover, Driscoll recalled that Level 3
representatives, in a later meeting, conceded that the six-minute batteries were
always considered to be temporary. Sirotka and the other Level 3 representatives,
however, testified that the six-minute solution was permanent. Whatever the true
state of affairs, there is no evidence that Level 3 ever communicated to Liebert its
-8-
understanding that the solution was meant to be permanent. The only
communication—Sirotka’s email instructing Driscoll to add the six-minute
batteries to the original order and explaining the 15-minute batteries “will need to
be installed when they arrive,” id. at 1619—indicated the six-minute batteries
were temporary.
After receiving Sirotka’s instruction to order the six-minute batteries in
addition to the 15-minute order, Driscoll faxed him a formal quotation for the six-
minute batteries. Sirotka immediately signed the quotation and, several weeks
later, submitted a corresponding purchase order, finalizing the transaction for
Level 3 to receive two sets of batteries. Never before in the course of business
between Level 3 and Liebert did the parties face a situation requiring a
replacement order of batteries for a UPS system.
Both Sets of Batteries Arrive
The six-minute batteries arrived at the Mondo Condo in November and
December 2000. Without inquiring why these batteries, unlike batteries in all
previous orders from Liebert, did not arrive directly from the manufacturer, Level
3 installed them on the seventh floor. The floor then stood vacant until November
2001, when Level 3 leased it to Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc.
While the floor still stood vacant, in March 2001 the original, 15-minute
batteries arrived from the manufacturer. There is no indication these batteries
were anything other than brand-new, factory-fresh. Level 3 did not, however,
-9-
swap the 15-minute batteries for the already-installed six-minute batteries, but
instead put them into storage, where they remained through the time of the trial.
Lehman Brothers, after leasing the seventh floor of the Mondo Condo,
tested the installed six-minute batteries. The test revealed the batteries retained
only 68 percent of their rated capacity, well below the 80 percent industry
standard. Unsatisfied with the batteries, Lehman Brothers demanded that Level 3
replace them. Level 3, in turn, asked Liebert to pay for the replacement. Liebert
refused to accept responsibility for the six-minute batteries.
B. Procedural History
Level 3 sued Liebert for breach of contract, alleging Liebert failed to
provide new batteries and to indemnify Level 3 in connection with the batteries.
Level 3 also alleged intentional misrepresentation, fraudulent concealment, and
negligent misrepresentation claims against both Liebert and Stillwell-Hansen.
Before trial, both Defendants moved for summary judgment on all claims.
In ruling against them, the district court concluded, as a matter of law, that the
Agreement between Level 3 and Liebert applied to the batteries at issue in the
case. In other words, the term “Products” in the Agreement encompassed
batteries as well as UPS systems. Consistent with that interpretation, the district
court, over Liebert’s objection, instructed the jury as follows: “the term
‘products,’ as used in the agreement, included batteries that Liebert sold to Level
-10-
3. Therefore, Liebert’s obligation to provide . . . new and good quality products[]
applied to the batteries at issue in this case.” 2 Id. at 1535.
The jury awarded Level 3 damages in the amount of $1,157,000 on breach
of contract, fraudulent concealment, and negligent misrepresentation claims. In
addition, Level 3 received $525,000 in punitive damages on the fraudulent
concealment claim. While finding that Level 3 proved its claim for intentional
misrepresentation, the jury concluded Level 3 did not prove that the claim caused
damages.
Liebert now appeals the jury’s verdict on breach of contract, fraudulent
concealment, and negligent misrepresentation claims. Level 3 does not cross-
appeal on the intentional misrepresentation claim.
II. Analysis
Liebert argues (1) the Agreement does not apply to UPS system batteries,
(2) the economic loss rule precludes Level 3’s negligent misrepresentation claim,
(3) the fraudulent concealment claim should have been dismissed because Liebert
owed Level 3 no duty to disclose the six-minute batteries were not new, and (4)
the punitive damages award should be stricken. In essence, Liebert asks us to
reverse the jury’s verdict on all claims and direct a judgment in its favor.
2
The district court read the instructions to the jury without giving them a
written copy. Id. at 1515 (“You will not receive the instructions in writing, and
you will not be allowed to ask after you begin to deliberate that a particular
phrase or a particular part of an instruction be read back to you.”).
-11-
Our reading of the Agreement reveals an ambiguity regarding whether the
batteries at issue in this case were Products. For this reason, the interpretation
question should have been submitted to the jury. The district court’s contrary
conclusion, construing the Agreement as a matter of law, was therefore incorrect.
And because the error was not harmless, we order a retrial. Because we disagree
with Liebert’s argument that Level 3’s tort claims should have been dismissed as
a matter of law, the retrial should include the breach of contract, fraudulent
concealment, and negligent misrepresentation claims.
We address the Agreement first and then turn to Liebert’s arguments
related to tort claims.
A. Interpreting the Agreement
The district court interpreted the Agreement as a matter of law and
instructed the jury accordingly. Thus, the first issue on appeal “is at bottom a
question of contract interpretation, one which we review de novo” under
applicable law. Allison v. Bank One-Denver, 289 F.3d 1223, 1244 (10th Cir.
2002). De novo review is particularly appropriate when, as here, “the district
court’s interpretation of the contract . . . turned on an analysis of the language and
an application of the principles of contract interpretation, rather than upon the
credibility of extrinsic evidence.” Milk ‘N’ More, Inc. v. Beavert, 963 F.2d 1342,
1345 (10th Cir. 1992). Likewise, “we review de novo legal objections to the jury
instructions.” Daniel v. Ben E. Keith Co., 97 F.3d 1329, 1334 (10th Cir. 1996).
-12-
1. Colorado Law of Contract Interpretation
Under Colorado law, contracts “should be interpreted consistently with the
well-established principles of contractual interpretation.” Allstate Ins. Co. v.
Huizar, 52 P.3d 816, 819 (Colo. 2002). Courts “must examine [contractual] terms
and attempt to determine the intent of the parties.” East Ridge of Fort Collins,
LLC v. Larimer & Weld Irrigation Co., 109 P.3d 969, 973 (Colo. 2005). What
courts are after is the parties’ mutual intent. Pepcol Mfg. Co. v. Denver Union
Corp., 687 P.2d 1310, 1313 (Colo. 1984). Absent an indication the parties chose
to deviate from plain meaning, “the instrument’s language must be examined and
construed in harmony with the plain and generally accepted meaning of the words
used.” East Ridge, 109 P.3d at 974. In other words, common usage prevails, and
“strained constructions should be avoided.” Allstate, 52 P.3d at 819.
To determine the meaning of a contract, courts must “examin[e] the entire
instrument, and not . . . view[] clauses or phrases in isolation.” Id. But while
every relevant provision must be considered and given effect, “a more specific
provision controls the effect of general provisions.” E-470 Pub. Highway Auth. v.
Jagow, 30 P.3d 798, 801 (Colo. Ct. App. 2001), aff’d, 49 P.3d 1151 (Colo. 2002).
As an overarching principle, in construing a contract courts must also “consider
the subject matter, the object of making it, the sense in which the parties naturally
understood it at the time it was made, and the purposes and objects to be
-13-
accomplished thereby.” Total Petroleum, Inc. v. Farrar, 787 P.2d 164, 167
(Colo. 1990) (quotation and alteration marks omitted).
When a contractual provision unambiguously resolves the parties’ dispute,
the interpreting court’s task is over. “It is axiomatic that in the absence of an
ambiguity a written contract cannot be varied by extrinsic evidence.” Pepcol, 687
P.2d at 1314. When, on the other hand, “an ambiguity has been determined to
exist, the meaning of its terms is generally an issue of fact to be determined in the
same manner as other factual issues.” East Ridge, 109 P.3d at 974. Extrinsic
evidence, for example, becomes admissible to determine the meaning of a
contractual provision at issue. “This extrinsic evidence may include any pertinent
circumstances attendant upon the transaction, including the conduct of the parties
under the agreement.” Pepcol, 687 P.2d at 1314. Courts in Colorado “have found
the conduct of the parties before the controversy arose to be a reliable test of their
interpretation of the agreement.” East Ridge, 109 P.3d at 975.
Determining whether “a written contract is ambiguous is a question of
law.” Id. It is not enough that the parties disagree about the meaning. Id.
“Rather, a contract is ambiguous [only] if it is fairly susceptible to more than one
interpretation.” Id. (quotation omitted). In guiding this determination, however,
Colorado law no longer restricts the interpreting court to the four corners of the
contract. Id. Where appropriate, “extrinsic evidence may be conditionally
admitted to determine whether the contract is ambiguous.” Id. This evidence,
-14-
though, must be stricken if the court, after considering the evidence, has
determined no ambiguity exists. Pepcol, 687 P.2d at 1314 n.3.
2. Application: The Agreement Is Ambiguous
Examining the Agreement, we conclude it does not unambiguously apply to
the batteries at issue in the case. In explaining our reasoning, we consider
batteries ordered with a UPS system and batteries ordered separately that could
provide a temporary source of power while the original (but delayed) batteries are
being delivered. The possibility that batteries might be ordered separately, as a
temporary solution, convinces us the Agreement is ambiguous with respect to the
batteries at issue in this case.
Batteries Purchased as Part of a UPS System
The Agreement applies to “Products,” defined as hardware that “shall be
described in a Product and Pricing Attachment . . . (the ‘P&P Attachment’).”
Aplt. App. 56. The P&P Attachment lists several hardware items. Among them
are UPS systems. UPS system batteries, however, are not specifically mentioned.
This omission raises the following question. Where the P&P Attachment
reads “Uninterruptible Power Supply Systems,” which ending applies: “including
batteries” or “batteries not included”? What, in other words, was the common
usage, “the plain and generally accepted meaning of the words used,” East Ridge,
109 P.3d at 974, that would have been mutually understood by Liebert and Level
3 when they entered into the Agreement?
-15-
At least with respect to batteries ordered as part of complete UPS systems,
the Agreement’s term “Products” might encompass the batteries. Three pieces of
extrinsic evidence suggest as much. First, the parties’ prior course of dealings
shows that batteries were likely understood to be a component of UPS systems
sold under the Agreement. In the first half of 2000, Level 3 purchased between
50 and 100 UPS systems from Liebert. Each order came with brand-new, factory-
fresh batteries, just as one would expect if batteries were Products, which Liebert
expressly warrantied under the Agreement to be delivered new. Ordinary course
of business between Liebert and Level 3 thus strongly suggests the parties
understood UPS systems and batteries to go together. The UPS system, after all,
cannot function properly without this key component.
Second, a standard quotation that Liebert would send to Level 3 describes
29 different components included with a purchase of a UPS system. One of these
29 components is a battery—its biggest component, in fact, representing just
under half of the cost of a complete UPS system.
Finally, as one of Level 3’s representatives testified, “the batteries and the
UPS’s are one in the same. . . . [T]hey’re useless unless together.” Aplt. App.
1126. Just as one does not expect to buy a car only to discover the battery is
missing, one apparently does not buy UPS systems without batteries. Thus, when
one buys a UPS system, one may be justified in assuming a battery accompanies
the system.
-16-
All three items of extrinsic evidence, especially taken together, suggest the
Agreement applies to batteries ordered as part of complete UPS systems.
In the face of this, Liebert categorically maintains that the Agreement
unambiguously excludes UPS batteries. We disagree. Liebert starts with the
canon of construction that “expression in a contract of one or more things of a
class implies exclusion of all not expressed.” Elliot v. Joyce, 889 P.2d 43, 46
(Colo. 1994). Because UPS systems are listed and batteries are not, Liebert
argues, batteries are not Products. But this principle of interpreting written
documents—expressio unius est exclusio alterius—does not support Liebert’s
argument. Far from being just one thing in the class of items that includes UPS
systems and other similar products, batteries form an integral part of a UPS
system. The batteries themselves are thus in a completely different class—the
class of components constituting a complete UPS system. By mentioning UPS
systems, the Agreement may be understood as implicitly mentioning all of the
components. The expressio unius principle finds no application here.
Liebert further contends language elsewhere in the Agreement shows that
UPS system batteries cannot be Products, as the term is defined in the Agreement.
The Agreement, in addition to general warranties for all Products, describes
limited warranties for UPS systems. By its terms, the limited warranty is void “if
User allows any battery for the Liebert product to discharge below the minimum
battery voltage cutoff point.” Aplt. App. 97. To Liebert, this language leads to
-17-
an inescapable conclusion—batteries are something different than a “Liebert
product.” But to us, the quoted language—employing an undefined term “Liebert
product” rather than the key defined term “Product”—does not support the
conclusion that the Agreement unambiguously excludes batteries from the term
Products. The quoted language is simply beside the point.
Accordingly, we reject Liebert’s categorical argument that batteries, as a
matter of law, are never Products. But in rejecting Liebert’s argument, we do not
mean to accept the opposite—that the batteries are unambiguously Products, to
which the Agreement would apply. Rather, as the following discussion
illustrates, the issue is ambiguous and must be decided by the jury.
Temporary Replacement Batteries
That batteries ordered and delivered in the ordinary course of business
between Level 3 and Liebert may constitute Products under the Agreement does
not resolve this case. What makes the issue in this case different from the
ordinary course of the parties’ business are the unusual circumstances
surrounding the transaction. These circumstances underscore the relevant
ambiguity in the Agreement.
Because of an unexpected delay in manufacturing batteries amidst the dot-
com boom in 2000, Level 3 had to order two sets of batteries. The first set—the
15-minute batteries—was delayed. Level 3 then asked Liebert to locate batteries
that could be delivered close to the original batteries’ scheduled delivery date.
-18-
For the additional set, Level 3 even settled for six-minute batteries instead of its
standard specification, which called for batteries with at least 15 minutes of ride-
through time.
If the replacement batteries were meant as a permanent solution—
completely displacing the original batteries and permanently installed together
with the original order of UPS systems—then the extrinsic evidence we have
already discussed might at least suggest the Agreement applied to the batteries.
The case would be analogous to ordering a watch at a jewelry store to be ready in
two days, only to find out two days later that the watch is not ready because the
store has not received a battery meant to go with the watch. If a customer asks
the store to forget the original battery and find a replacement that day (perhaps a
battery with slightly different specifications), the customer may be justified in
expecting the whole thing, including the replacement battery, to be new. The
same applies to replacement UPS system batteries meant to become a permanent
replacement.
But not so in the case of a temporary solution. To continue with the watch
analogy, suppose the store tells the customer that the original battery, although
delayed, is sure to arrive within a week. Meanwhile, the customer instead can
have a temporary battery with less power installed, which the store will swap for
the originally-intended battery in a week. This represents a temporary solution.
In this circumstance, it no longer follows that the replacement battery ought to be
-19-
new. All that the replacement battery is meant to do is enable the customer to
enjoy the watch while waiting for the original battery to arrive. The temporary
replacement battery, for example, may have only half of its power left. The
customer may well not care, so long as the battery contains enough power to last
until the original battery arrives.
The Agreement is ambiguous on whether batteries, intended as only a
temporary solution, would constitute Products. The parties’ prior course of
dealings does not shed any light on this question, and neither does the quotation
sheet listing all of UPS systems’ components, which obviously does not anticipate
Level 3 having to purchase two sets of batteries. Thus, the district court judge
should have let the jury determine the meaning of the Agreement on this issue,
with the parties introducing extrinsic evidence.
Like Liebert, although at the polar opposite end, Level 3 argues no
ambiguity exists, and the Agreement clearly applies to any set of batteries Level 3
purchases from Liebert. We are not persuaded. First, Level 3 argues items need
not actually be listed in the P&P Attachment to qualify as Products. The
Agreement contains a general provision, instructing that “[a]ll listings of items
shall not be taken to be exclusive, but shall include other items, whether similar
or dissimilar to those listed, as the context reasonably requires.” Aplt. App. 73.
Level 3 argues that context reasonably requires that any battery purchased from
Liebert be considered a Product.
-20-
This argument fails because a more specific provision in the Agreement—
the requirement that Products be described in the P&P Attachment—controls the
effect of the general provision on which Level 3 relies. See E-470, 30 P.3d at
801. Moreover, as the relevant context that supposedly requires all batteries to be
Products, Level 3 marshals the parties’ course of prior dealings. But as we have
already explained, that course of dealings does not address the unique situation in
this case.
Second, Level 3 argues the six-minute batteries must be Products because
they were purchased via a purchase order submitted to Liebert. To be sure, the
Agreement does say that “[a]ll purchases of Products by [Level 3] shall be made
by means of purchase orders.” Aplt. App. 57. But we cannot logically infer the
flip side—that all items ordered via a purchase order are necessarily Products.
Lastly, Level 3 argues that all items sold by Liebert to Level 3 are either
Products, which the Agreement warrants to be new, or “third-party accessories,”
which under the Agreement receive only the warranty provided by the third party.
Because UPS system batteries are not accessories, the argument goes, they must
be Products.
We agree that UPS system batteries, constituting an essential component of
a functioning UPS system, are not accessories, as the word is commonly
understood. An item is an accessory only when it represents “a thing of
secondary or subordinate importance[,] an object or device that is not essential in
-21-
itself but that adds to the beauty, convenience, or effectiveness of something
else.” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 11 (2002); see also Black’s
Law Dictionary 15 (8th ed. 2004) (defining “accessory” as “[s]omething of
secondary or subordinate importance”). Rather than merely adding to the
effectiveness of a UPS system, a battery is an essential component, without which
there can be no effectiveness. To conclude otherwise would require a “strained
construction[]” that in the absence of evidence showing the parties intended such
a construction, “should be avoided.” Allstate, 52 P.3d at 819.
But Level 3 is wrong to erect a false dichotomy between Products and
third-party accessories, as if no other choices exist. Temporary replacement
batteries may well be neither Products nor accessories; the parties, when they
entered into the Agreement, may not have contemplated a situation needing a
replacement solution ever to arise.
We therefore hold the Agreement does not unambiguously answer whether
the six-minute batteries should be considered Products. On remand, this question
becomes one of fact, to be answered by the jury.
-22-
3. Not a Harmless Error
We next turn to whether the erroneous jury instruction constitutes harmless
error. We conclude it does not.
“Where an appellate court determines that the district court has given a
legally erroneous jury instruction, the judgment must be reversed if the jury might
have based its verdict on the erroneously given instruction.” Wankier v. Crown
Equip. Corp., 353 F.3d 862, 867 (10th Cir. 2003) (quotations omitted, emphasis
added); see also Dillard & Sons Constr., Inc. v. Burnup & Sims Comtec, Inc., 51
F.3d 910, 916–17 (10th Cir. 1995) (noting we must reverse the judgment and
remand the case for a new trial if “the jury ‘might’ have based its verdict on [an]
erroneous instruction”). The “might have” threshold, as its language suggests,
requires reversal “even if that possibility is very unlikely.” Wankier, 353 F.3d at
867 (quotations and alterations omitted, emphasis added). Only “when the
erroneous instruction could not have changed the result of the case” can we say
the error is harmless and does not require reversal. World Wide Ass’n of
Specialty Programs v. Pure, Inc., 450 F.3d 1132, 1139 (10th Cir. 2006) (quotation
omitted).
This inquiry is necessarily hypothetical. We do not know precisely how the
jury would have resolved a case in the absence of an erroneous instruction. This
is why the test is not whether the jury did base its verdict on an erroneous
instruction, only whether it might have done so.
-23-
The jury awarded Level 3 the same amount of damages on its breach of
contract, negligent misrepresentation, and fraudulent concealment claims. To
determine whether the erroneous jury instruction might have affected the jury’s
verdict, we must analyze each claim separately. In other words, to conclude the
error is not harmless, we must determine the error might have affected the jury’s
verdict on each of the three claims.
Breach of Contract
In instructing the jury the Agreement applied to the batteries at issue in this
case, the district court virtually assured that the jury would find for Level 3 on the
breach of contract claim. To prevail on that claim, Level 3 was required to prove
(1) “the defendant entered into a contract with the plaintiff to supply batteries of a
specified duration and quality and/or to indemnify the plaintiff against third-party
claims based on the performance of those batteries,” and (2) “the defendant . . .
failed to supply batteries of a specified duration or quality, or it failed to
indemnify the plaintiff against third-party claims.” Aplt. App. 1532 (jury
instructions). Because the parties did not dispute that Level 3 and Liebert did in
fact sign the Agreement and that Liebert failed to supply new batteries or to
indemnify Level 3 against a claim by Lehman Brothers, the district court’s
instruction effectively directed the jury to find that both of the above elements are
satisfied.
-24-
Indeed, the only real dispute between the parties was (and remains) whether
the six-minute batteries constituted Products, as the term is defined in the
Agreement. The district court’s instruction resolved this dispute in Level 3’s
favor. Accordingly, the jury might have based (indeed, very likely did base) its
breach of contract verdict on the erroneous instruction.
Negligent Misrepresentation
To recover under the negligent misrepresentation theory, Level 3 had to
prove (1) Liebert “gave false information to Level 3,” (2) “in the course of their
business,” (3) “in a business transaction,” (4) Liebert was “negligent in obtaining
or communicating the information,” (5) Liebert “gave the information with the
intent that Level 3 would act in reliance or knowing that Level 3 would act in
reliance on the information,” (6) “Level 3 relied on the information,” and (7) the
reliance caused damages. Id. at 1541–42 (jury instructions). We agree with
Liebert that the erroneous jury instruction might have affected the jury’s
resolution of at least three elements.
To prove Liebert had supplied false information to Level 3 in connection
with the sale of the six-minute batteries, Level 3 relied exclusively on two pieces
of evidence. First, Level 3 pointed to the September 27, 2000 email from
Stillwell-Hansen’s Driscoll to Level 3’s Sirotka, in which Driscoll referred to the
batteries at issue as “this new battery.” Id. at 1620. But the email contained
references to both the original order of 15-minute batteries and the suggested
-25-
solution for Level 3 to purchase six-minute batteries. The phrase “new battery”
could well mean one of at least two things—either Driscoll was describing the
six-minute batteries as factory-fresh or he was simply referring to the new six-
minute batteries as opposed to the old 15-minute batteries, using “new” to
indicate which of the two sets of batteries he was describing.
Second, Level 3 highlighted one of its representative’s testimony that
Liebert “came up with a new 6-minute battery alternative.” Id. at 1233. The
representative, likely relying on the same ambiguous usage of the word “new,”
said Driscoll had “stated [the six-minute batteries] were new.” Id.
To find that Liebert gave Level 3 false information about the six-minute
batteries, the jury must have interpreted Driscoll’s reference to “this new battery”
as stating that the six-minute batteries were in fact brand-new, factory-fresh. This
conclusion, however, was by no means obvious and required the jury to interpret
the ambiguous statement in light of other evidence in the case. Among other
things the jury already knew was that the Agreement required the six-minute
batteries to be new; they were so instructed by the judge. Armed with this
knowledge, they naturally inferred that Driscoll falsely misrepresented the
batteries to be new. The jury, therefore, might have based, at least partly, its
conclusion that Liebert had supplied Level 3 with false information on the
erroneous instruction.
-26-
Moreover, the jury’s instruction that the six-minute batteries were Products
under the Agreement—and thus had to be new—might have affected the jury’s
conclusion regarding two other elements: (1) Liebert’s intent for Level 3 to rely
on the false information and (2) Level 3’s actual reliance. If, as the jury was
instructed, the Agreement required the batteries to be new, then the jury’s
conclusion was unremarkable. Driscoll said “new,” probably intending for Level
3 to believe the batteries fit the Agreement’s specification. And Level 3 likely
relied on the same statement because it was expecting the batteries to be new. All
were easy findings for the jury to make.
Without the erroneous instruction, however, the findings would have been
much harder to make. If the jury were free to conclude the Agreement did not
apply to the batteries at issue in this case, then it would no longer necessarily
follow that Driscoll’s misrepresentation (assuming it was a misrepresentation)
intended to induce Level 3 to act a certain way. Nor would it necessarily follow
that Level 3 relied on the misrepresentation. If, in other words, the jury were to
conclude the Agreement did not apply to batteries meant as only a temporary
solution, the jury might not have imputed to Liebert the intent to cause reliance,
or actual reliance to Level 3.
In sum, whether the jury believed the Agreement applied to the six-minute
batteries might have guided its resolution of at least three elements of the
-27-
negligent misrepresentation claim. Because each element is necessary to prove
the claim, the jury might have based its verdict on the erroneous instruction.
Fraudulent Concealment
To prevail on its fraudulent concealment claim, Level 3 had to prove the
following elements: (1) Liebert “concealed a past or present fact” it had a duty to
disclose, (2) “the fact was material,” (3) Liebert “concealed the fact with the
intent of creating a false impression in the mind of Level 3,” (4) “intent that
Level 3 take a course of action that it might not have taken if it knew the true
facts,” (5) “Level 3 took such action or decided not to act” relying on the
concealed information, (6) the reliance was justified, and (7) the reliance caused
damages. Aplt. App. 1539 (jury instructions).
Unlike the previous claim, which looks to what was communicated, this
cause of action focuses on what Liebert did not disclose to Level 3. Specifically,
Level 3 argued Driscoll should have disclosed that the batteries were not new, of
which Driscoll was well aware. As with the negligent misrepresentation claim,
however, the jury, free from the erroneous instruction, might have decided several
elements in Liebert’s favor.
The intent for Level 3 to rely and its actual reliance are similar to several
elements of the negligent misrepresentation claim. For the reasons we have just
discussed, the jury might have decided them in Liebert’s favor had it not been
instructed that the six-minute batteries were covered under the Agreement.
-28-
Liebert makes an even stronger case regarding the materiality element.
Whether the batteries are Products under the Agreement speaks directly to what
Level 3 could reasonably expect Liebert to disclose—which facts, in other words,
were or were not material. If, as the jury was instructed, the Agreement covered
the batteries at issue in this case, then the jury could easily infer that whether the
batteries were new constituted a material fact, which Liebert had the duty to
disclose. If, on the other hand, the jury were free to conclude the Agreement did
not cover temporary replacement batteries, then the jury might well have reasoned
the age of the batteries to be immaterial. All that may have mattered to Level 3 in
the latter scenario was whether the batteries would last long enough to fill a delay
in the delivery of the original, 15-minute batteries. The jury thus might have
based its resolution of the materiality element on the erroneous instruction.
Likewise, the jury might have relied on the erroneous instruction to find
that Liebert concealed a material fact intending to create a false impression—or,
put differently, intending to mislead Level 3. If the six-minute batteries, like all
Products under the Agreement, had to be new, then the jury could infer from
Driscoll’s failure to disclose the batteries’ age Liebert’s intent to mislead Level 3
into thinking the batteries were in fact new, in compliance with the Agreement’s
warranty provision. But if the Agreement did not apply to the batteries, then the
jury might have concluded Driscoll’s non-disclosure represented nothing more
than an innocent omission of a fact not deemed relevant.
-29-
Finally, whether Level 3’s reliance on the concealment was justifiable also
relates to the inquiry into what the Agreement did and did not cover. When we
posit the batteries were Products and must have been new under the Agreement,
Level 3 could justifiably conclude they were in fact new, absent Liebert’s
warning to the contrary. If, however, we let the jury conclude the batteries were
not covered under the Agreement, then the jury is free to conclude Level 3 simply
assumed, without good reason, the batteries were new. Level 3’s reliance on the
concealment, in other words, might not have been justified. The jury might have
found this element in Level 3’s favor based on the erroneous instruction.
As with the negligent misrepresentation claim, all elements of fraudulent
concealment must be found for Level 3 in order for it to prevail. That the jury
might have based on the erroneous jury instruction its determination of several of
the elements demonstrates the error might have affected the jury’s verdict on this
claim.
* * *
In sum, the district court erred in instructing the jury the batteries at issue
in this case were Products under the Agreement. The jury must have been
allowed to construe the Agreement, ambiguous on this question, for itself. And
because the jury might have based on the erroneous instruction its verdict in favor
of Level 3 on all claims, the error is not harmless and requires a remand.
B. Other Issues
-30-
Liebert also argues (1) the economic loss rule precludes the negligent
misrepresentation claim, (2) no duty to disclose the six-minute batteries’ age
existed to support the fraudulent concealment claim, and (3) the punitive damages
award was improper. We disagree with the first two arguments and, in light of
the remand for retrial, need not reach the third.
1. Negligent Misrepresentation: The Economic Loss Rule
Whether the economic loss rule applies to bar Level 3’s negligent
misrepresentation claim “is an issue of law that we review de novo.” Colo.
Visionary Academy v. Medtronic, Inc., 397 F.3d 867, 870 (10th Cir. 2005).
“Broadly speaking, the economic loss rule is intended to maintain the
boundary between contract law and tort law.” Town of Alma v. AZCO Constr.,
Inc., 10 P.3d 1256, 1259 (Colo. 2000); see generally id. at 1259–64 (describing in
detail the rule’s origins). Accordingly, under Colorado law, the “proper focus in
an analysis under the economic loss rule is on the source of the duties alleged to
have been breached.” Grynberg v. Agri Tech, Inc., 10 P.3d 1267, 1269 (Colo.
2000). Boiled down, the rule prohibits “a party suffering only economic loss
from the breach of an express or implied contractual duty [to] assert a tort claim
for such a breach absent an independent duty of care under tort law.” Id.
(emphasis added). An independent duty of care under tort law thus serves as the
boundary between contract and tort law, permitting only those tort claims that
-31-
allege such a duty has been breached. See A.C. Excavating v. Yacht Club II
Homeowners Ass’n, Inc., 114 P.3d 862, 865–66 (Colo. 2005).
Explaining the demarcation between the two legal concepts in more detail,
the Colorado Supreme Court has said, “[t]ort obligations generally arise from
duties imposed by law . . . without regard to any agreement or contract.” Town of
Alma, 10 P.3d at 1262. Contract obligations, on the other hand, “arise from
promises made between parties [to] allocate risks and costs during bargaining.”
Id. Demanding that an independent duty of care exist before a plaintiff can
recover under tort law, the economic loss doctrine “serves to encourage parties to
confidently allocate risks and costs during their bargaining without fear that
unanticipated liability may arise in the future, effectively negating the parties’
efforts to build these cost considerations into the contract.” Id. Absent an
independent duty under tort law, the parties are held to the terms of their bargain.
Liebert argues Level 3, in asserting the negligent misrepresentation claim,
is simply restating its breach of contract claim and thus should not be able to
recover under tort law. Under Colorado law, however, the tort of negligent
misrepresentation is “based ‘not on principles of contractual obligation but on
principles of duty and reasonable conduct.’” Id. at 1263 (quoting Keller v. A.O.
Smith Harvestore Prods., Inc., 819 P.2d 69, 73 (Colo. 1991)).
Level 3 alleged Liebert, independently of the Agreement, breached its duty
of care in communicating information when it supplied purportedly false
-32-
information to Level 3 in the course of a business transaction. A breach of this
duty is precisely what the tort of negligent misrepresentation seeks to address.
Keller, 819 P.2d at 71 (explaining the duty underlying the negligent
misrepresentation tort as a duty “to exercise reasonable care or competence in
obtaining or communicating the information” (quoting Restatement (Second) of
Torts § 552(1) (1965)); see also Medtronic, 397 F.3d at 870 (recognizing
Colorado’s adoption of section 552 of the Restatement). The district court thus
correctly allowed Level 3 to argue its negligent misrepresentation claim to the
jury.
Liebert instead argues the district court should have applied the economic
loss rule to dismiss Level 3’s negligent misrepresentation claim. Liebert relies on
BRW, Inc. v. Dufficy & Sons, Inc., 99 P.3d 66 (Colo. 2004), but that case is not
helpful to the cause. In BRW, the parties’ contract “required [BRW] to inspect
the [painting] plans and specifications with care, skill, and diligence.” Id. at 75.
“If any work was not in conformance with the contract documents, BRW was
required to make a ‘verbal report of such nonconformance’ followed by a written
report.” Id. Because the contract explicitly described one party’s duty to
communicate certain information to the other, the economic loss rule barred the
negligent misrepresentation claim. Id. In other words, the duty of care in
communicating information—on which the negligent misrepresentation tort is
based—did not exist independently of the parties’ contractual obligations in BRW.
-33-
That is not the case here. Liebert’s alleged misrepresentation was not a
statement made in fulfilling a specific duty under the contract. Rather, it was
made in the course of conversations to modify Level 3’s purchase
order—substituting (at least temporarily) six-minute batteries for the 15-minute
batteries that could not be promptly delivered. In this context, the alleged
misrepresentation is analogous to a misrepresentation that induces another party
to enter into a contract. See Medtronic, 397 F.3d at 874 (concluding that under
Colorado law, “the tort of negligent misrepresentation can arise from ordinary,
arm’s length bargaining that was expected to lead to a contractual relationship”).
Thus, if as Level 3 alleges, Liebert communicated false information to Level 3
regarding the batteries’ age, the jury could conclude Liebert breached a tort law
duty that existed independently of the Agreement.
To fit this case under BRW, Liebert argues “Colorado recognizes no
independent duty to make accurate statements describing commercial goods like
batteries.” Aplt. Br. 44. But Colorado tort law, whatever else it may or may not
require by way of accuracy in describing commercial goods, clearly imposes a
duty of “reasonable care or competence in obtaining or communicating the
information.” Restatement § 552(1). If the jury concludes Liebert breached this
duty by purportedly supplying false information to Level 3—representing the
batteries to be new when they in fact were not—the resultant negligent
misrepresentation claim is cognizable under Colorado tort law.
-34-
We conclude the district court properly allowed Level 3’s negligent
misrepresentation claim to go to the jury, and the same result should apply on
remand. The conclusion is strengthened by the fact that, at least on Liebert’s
interpretation of the Agreement, the sale of the six-minute batteries laid outside
its scope, and the parties were merely negotiating a new contract, rather than
operating under the existing one. For all of the above reasons, Level 3’s
negligent misrepresentation claim is not barred by the economic loss rule.
2. Fraudulent Concealment: Duty to Disclose
Liebert also argues the fraudulent concealment claim should have been
dismissed because Liebert had no duty to disclose to Level 3 the six-minute
batteries were not new. “The question of whether a duty exists is a question of
law,” which we review de novo. Shute v. Moon Lake Elec. Ass’n, Inc., 899 F.2d
999, 1001 (10th Cir. 1990).
“To succeed on a claim for fraudulent concealment or non-disclosure, a
plaintiff must show that the defendant had a duty to disclose material
information.” Mallon Oil Co. v. Bowen/Edwards Assocs., Inc., 965 P.2d 105, 111
(Colo. 1998). Such a duty exists “to disclose . . . material facts that in equity or
good conscience should be disclosed.” Poly Trucking, Inc. v. Concentra Health
Servs., Inc., 93 P.3d 561, 564 (Colo. Ct. App. 2004) (citing Mallon Oil, 965 P.2d
at 111). To determine which facts a person in equity or good conscience must
disclose, Colorado courts look to the Restatement for guidance.
-35-
Section 551(2)(b) of the Restatement controls the outcome in this case. It
reads, “One party to a business transaction is under a duty to exercise reasonable
care to disclose to the other before the transaction is consummated[] matters
known to him that he knows to be necessary to prevent his partial or ambiguous
statement of the facts from being misleading.” Restatement § 551(2)(b). As
explained in the comments, a statement may be misleading when “made so
ambiguously that it may have two interpretations, one of which is false.” Id.
cmt. g. “When such a statement has been made, there is a duty to disclose the
additional information necessary to prevent it from misleading the recipient.” Id.
It is undisputed Driscoll on at least one occasion referred to the six-minute
batteries as “new.” As we have already explained, this reference is ambiguous in
that it can be understood to represent one of at least two things: (1) that the
batteries are brand-new, or (2) that the batteries are new only insofar as they are
not the same as the old order of 15-minute batteries. In other words, the former
describes the batteries’ age, while the latter merely places the two orders of
batteries on a time line. And there may well be other interpretations, but of the
two examples, only the latter is true; the former is demonstrably false, as Driscoll
knew. Thus, the jury could conclude that Liebert, under a duty to correct a
misleading statement, had to disclose the batteries were not new.
In response, Liebert argues “Driscoll made no partial or ambiguous
statement of the facts” to trigger a duty under Section 551(2)(b). Rply. Br. 26. In
-36-
making this argument, Liebert is presumably contending the “new” reference
unambiguously describes a different order of batteries, but not their age. While
Liebert’s construction is reasonable, it is by no means obvious or unambiguous.
And Liebert cannot avoid the ambiguity by simply selecting one interpretation
and pretending away the other.
Liebert also relies on two Colorado state court decisions, arguing they
demonstrate a party to a contract does not have a duty to disclose matters not
covered by the contract. See Poly Trucking, 93 P.3d at 561; Xerox Corp. v. ISC
Corp., 632 P.2d 618 (Colo. Ct. App. 1981). This argument suffers from two
flaws. First, unlike the contracts in those cases, the Agreement, though
ambiguous, may be construed to apply to the batteries at issue in this case. If so,
then Liebert’s non-disclosure would relate to matters well within the scope of the
Agreement. And second, neither Poly Trucking nor Xerox involved situations
where a defendant triggered the duty to disclose by making an ambiguous
statement capable of misleading. But under Level 3’s theory of the case, the jury
could conclude Liebert has made just such a statement, thus triggering its duty to
disclose.
Accordingly, Level 3’s fraudulent concealment claim properly relies on
Liebert’s duty to disclose the batteries’ age and condition.
3. Punitive Damages on the Fraud Claim
-37-
In light of the remand for new trial, we need not address Liebert’s
challenge to the jury’s punitive damages award. “Circuit courts have
considerable discretion concerning the scope of a remand.” Heno v. Sprint/United
Management Co., 208 F.3d 847, 859 (10th Cir. 2000). As in Heno, “because we
are remanding the compensatory portion of the case,” the parties “may adduce
additional or different evidence,” id., which obviates our need to consider
Liebert’s challenge to the punitive damages award.
On remand, Level 3 and Liebert will present additional evidence to
convince the jury the Agreement should be construed one way or another. In light
of the potentially new evidence, we should not now speculate how the new jury
will resolve Level 3’s request for punitive damages.
* * *
The district court erred in concluding the Agreement unambiguously
applied to the batteries at issue in this case. The instruction might have affected
the jury’s resolution of Level 3’s breach of contract, negligent misrepresentation,
and fraudulent concealment claims. But the district court correctly allowed
Level 3’s tort claims to go to the jury. The same three claims should thus be
retried on remand.
-38-
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we VACATE the jury’s verdict for Level 3 on
breach of contract, fraudulent concealment (including punitive damages), and
negligent misrepresentation claims and REVERSE and REMAND for new trial.
-39-