Filed 11/13/15 Digital Document Technologies v. Friedberg & Parker CA3
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
(Sacramento)
----
DIGITAL DOCUMENT TECHNOLOGIES, LLC, C077910
Cross-complainant and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. 34-2012-
00123046-CU-BT-GDS)
v.
FREIDBERG & PARKER, LLP,
Cross-defendant and Respondent.
This appeal arises from a dispute between a law firm, respondent Freidberg &
Parker, LLP (Freidberg), and a company that provides technical electronic services,
appellant Digital Document Technologies, LLC (DDT).
It is undisputed that Freidberg asked DDT to process electronic media for use in
litigation, and that Freidberg had asked DDT to do other work before. This time, DDT’s
e-mails with Freidberg at least arguably suggested the work would result in a modest
charge, but when the work was done, DDT charged over $50,000. After a court trial
1
involving expert testimony as to the reasonable value of DDT’s services, the trial court
awarded DDT just over $8,000, but denied interest or attorney fees.
On appeal, DDT faults the trial court for not finding that Freidberg was a
“merchant” under the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), and not understanding that
DDT’s operative pleading embraced a UCC contract claim, which, if sustained, would
have entitled DDT to an award of attorney fees, costs, and interest.1 As we will explain,
DDT has not demonstrated prejudice from any arguable error. Accordingly, we shall
affirm.
BACKGROUND
Freidberg sued DDT--originally sued as Mirror Imaging Document Solutions--
eventually filing a second amended complaint alleging DDT overcharged Freidberg when
it charged more than $50,000 to process electronic media for Freidberg’s use in litigation.
DDT’s amended cross-complaint alleged common counts, seeking payment of its
invoice plus interest and attorney fees.2 DDT typed onto the Judicial Council form
complaint an allegation that the claim was “Pursuant to the attached contract/statement
between the parties by and through their prior course of dealing as between merchants.”
The current as well as two prior invoices--presumably, to show the prior course of
dealing between the parties--were attached.
________________________________________________________________
1
Further undesignated statutory references are to the California Uniform Commercial
Code.
2
“A common count is proper whenever the plaintiff claims a sum of money due, either
as an indebtedness in a sum certain, or for the reasonable value of services, goods, etc.,
furnished. It makes no difference that the proof shows the original transaction to be an
express contract, a contract implied in fact, or a quasi-contract.” ( 4 Witkin, Cal.
Procedure (5th ed. 2008) Pleading, § 554, p. 682 (Witkin).) “[T]he only essential
allegations are (1) the statement of indebtedness in a certain sum, (2) the consideration,
i.e., goods sold, work done, etc., and (3) nonpayment.” (Id., § 557, pp. 685-686.)
2
After Freidberg dismissed its second amended complaint, a two-day court trial on
DDT’s amended cross-complaint ensued. The record does not include a reporter’s
transcript of the trial, or a settled statement, so our understanding is taken from the
minute orders, trial briefs, and statement of decision.
DDT’s trial brief alleged the dispute “involves the production/delivery of goods by
and between merchants under the” UCC. Freidberg alleged services--not goods--were at
issue, and that DDT’s invoice was unconscionable.
The trial court accepted posttrial briefing. DDT outlined a common counts theory,
relied in part on the UCC to seek a contract recovery, and in part sought quantum meruit.3
Freidberg asserted no contract existed, and the invoice was unconscionable.
The tentative statement of decision observed no UCC theory was pleaded. DDT
objected, contending it had pleaded a UCC contract theory. The difference, according to
DDT, was that if the bill were unconscionable, and the trial court awarded quantum
meruit rather than contract damages, DDT still would be entitled to attorney fees and
interest at the purported “contract” rate.4
The final statement of decision noted that the trial court had confirmed with
counsel that DDT was “proceeding on a common count theory and not breach of
contract.” The trial court found Freidberg was not a “merchant” and awarded DDT
quantum meruit, also finding that if the UCC applied, no attorney fees or interest would
be available, for lack of a course of dealing.
________________________________________________________________
3
“ ‘Where, without express contract, one performs services for another with that other’s
knowledge, the services being of a character usually charged for, and the other person
does not dissent but benefits by the services, a promise to pay the reasonable value of
such services is implied.’ ” (Spinelli v. Tallcott (1969) 272 Cal.App.2d 589, 595.)
4
Interest is not normally awarded on quantum meruit claims, although the court has
discretion to award interest if the claim is based on a contract. (Civ. Code, § 3287, subd.
(b); see George v. Double-D Foods, Inc. (1984) 155 Cal.App.3d 36, 46-48.)
3
The trial court found DDT provided services such as “document scanning and
[copying], the provision of color copies . . . digital conversion, and certain electronic
discovery applications.” “From time to time” DDT had performed “a variety of these
services” for Freidberg. In the prior instances, the work involved fewer than 15,000
pages and the largest bill was less than $3,000. In this transaction, Freidberg gave DDT
two DVDs relevant to a case that could hold large amounts of data, but Freidberg did not
know “the extent of the content” thereon. By e-mail, a DDT employee clarified that
Freidberg wanted DDT to extract files, repair files, and convert files, Freidberg asked for
a page count, and about a week later the DDT employee replied that the page count was
over 500,000, and indicated DDT could provide a hard drive with relevant files on it for
$99; a Freidberg employee agreed. Freidberg’s two trial experts estimated the work
should have been billed at around $6,900 to $7,500, not the $50,000+ claimed on DDT’s
invoice.
The trial court found: “The emails and phone calls between the parties, while
establishing an agreement to proceed on the work detailed, do not discuss price or terms
or attorney fees or interest.” Nor did the invoice itself amount to a contract.
Accordingly, a quantum meruit recovery for a quasi-contract, rather than contract
recovery for an implied-in-fact contract, was appropriate. (See Maglica v. Maglica
(1998) 66 Cal.App.4th 442, 455 [distinguishing a “ ‘quasi-contractual’ quantum meruit
theory” with “an implied-in-fact contract” theory of recovery].)
The trial court awarded DDT the higher amount testified to by Freidberg’s experts
plus sales tax, for a total of $8,090.95, but also awarded Freidberg its costs of $4,299.70.
DDT timely appealed from the ensuing judgment.
4
DISCUSSION
I
Application of the UCC
A. Standard of Review
“Because [appellant] provides us only the original trial court file, and fails to
provide any reporter’s transcript of the trial preceding the judgment from which he
appeals, we must treat this as an appeal ‘on the judgment roll.’ [Citations.] Therefore,
. . . we ‘ “must conclusively presume that the evidence is ample to sustain the [trial
court’s] findings.” ’ [Citation.] Our review is limited to determining whether any error
‘appears on the face of the record.’ ” (Nielsen v. Gibson (2009) 178 Cal.App.4th 318,
324-325.)
“ ‘In a judgment roll appeal every presumption is in favor of the validity of the
judgment and any condition of facts consistent with its validity will be presumed to have
existed rather than one which will defeat it.’ ” (Estate of Kievernagel (2008) 166
Cal.App.4th 1024, 1031.)
B. Analysis
DDT contends the UCC entitled it to attorney fees and interest based on the
following chain of reasoning: (1) Both parties were “merchants” under the UCC. (2)
Under the UCC, an invoice creates a contract if it is not disputed within 10 days.
(§ 2201, subd. (2).) (3) Freidberg did not timely dispute DDT’s invoice. (4) Therefore,
DDT and Freidberg had a binding contract for the invoice price.
As we shall explain, even if the first point is correct--which we discuss for
completeness but need not decide--the second point is wrong as a matter of law.
DDT suggests Freidberg’s merchant status is a legal question to be reviewed de
novo. We disagree. As in other factual contests, in determining whether a party is a
merchant under the UCC we review the facts for substantial evidence and ascertain
whether those facts support the judgment. (See Prenger v. Baker (Iowa 1995) 542
5
N.W.2d 805, 808 [“whether a party . . . is a merchant is a question of fact”]; Smith v.
General Mills, Inc. (1998) 291 Mont. 426, 430 [968 P.2d 723, 726] [“mixed question of
law and fact”]; Vince v. Broome (Miss. 1983) 443 So.2d 23, 28 [“a question of fact for
the jury’s determination” after legally correct instructions]; 10, Williston on Contracts
(4th ed. 2011) § 29:25, pp. 801-803.)
DDT had to prove Freidberg was a merchant under the UCC, which, for purposes
of the prompt-dispute rule, “means a person who deals in goods of the kind or otherwise
by his occupation holds himself out as having knowledge or skill peculiar to the practices
or goods involved in the transaction or to whom such knowledge or skill may be
attributed by his employment of an agent or broker or other intermediary who by his
occupation holds himself out as having such knowledge or skill.” (§ 2104, subd. (1).)
The trial court found Freidberg “a civil law firm, asked a specialized vendor to extract
documents” from media for use during discovery or trial, and DDT “has provided the
Court with no case that establishes that a law firm under these, or any circumstances, is a
‘merchant’ for purposes of” the UCC.
On appeal, DDT contends “A merchant . . . is simply someone in business and if
he is transacting with another business, a transaction between merchants exists.” Thus, a
civil law firm, in DDT’s view, must be a merchant. As authority, DDT relies entirely on
a jury instruction that defines “merchant” in part in four ways, the first of which is “one
who engages in a trade, business, or a type of commerce to such an extent that [he/she/it]
has or should have knowledge of common business practices.” (2 Cal. Forms of Jury
Instruction (Matthew Bender 2012) Commercial Code Sales Contracts, No. MB300H.06,
p. 3H-14.) Although DDT fails to provide authority explaining how the instruction
squares with the statute, we have found authority that fills in the gap. According to the
official comments to the UCC: “The special provisions as to merchants appear only in
this Article and they are of three kinds. Sections . . . dealing with the statute of frauds,
firm offers, confirmatory memoranda and modification rest on normal business practices
6
which are or ought to be typical of and familiar to any person in business. For purposes
of these sections almost every person in business would, therefore, be deemed to be a
‘merchant’ under the language ‘who . . . by his occupation holds himself out as having
knowledge or skill peculiar to the practices . . . involved in the transaction . . . ’ since the
practices involved in the transaction are non-specialized business practices such as
answering mail. In this type of provision, banks or even universities, for example, well
may be ‘merchants.’ ” (U. Com. Code (A.L.I. 2014-2015 ed.) Sales, com. to § 2-104, pp.
55-56, italics added.) Thus, “a purchaser can be considered a merchant where the
purchaser is a ‘business professional as opposed to a casual or inexperienced seller or
buyer,’ [citation], and the purchase involves a type of goods related and necessary to the
business or occupation of the purchaser.” (Ready Trucking, Inc. v. BP Exploration & Oil
Co. (2001) 248 Ga.App. 701, 704 [548 S.E.2d 420, 423-424].)
Under this authority, Freidberg, as a civil law firm, might well be a merchant for
some purposes, and be subject to the prompt-dispute rule.
Section 2201, subdivision (1) establishes a statute of frauds, and section 2201,
subdivision (2) establishes one of the exceptions, as follows: “Between merchants if
within a reasonable time a writing in confirmation of the contract and sufficient against
the sender is received and the party receiving it has reason to know its contents, it
satisfies the requirements of subdivision (1) against the party unless written notice of
objection to its contents is given within 10 days after it is received.” Thus, this section’s
prompt-dispute rule’s “only effect . . . is to take away from the party who fails to [timely
dispute a writing] the defense of the Statute of Frauds; the burden of persuading the trier
of fact that a contract was in fact made orally prior to the written confirmation is
unaffected.” (U. Com. Code, supra, com. to § 2-201, p. 61; see 1 Williston, supra, § 2-3,
pp. 127-128 [“Some courts have erroneously held that failure to object to a signed
confirmatory memorandum renders its terms binding]; see also id. at pp. 129-130.)
7
DDT misinterprets the prompt-dispute rule, arguing that its application here
converts Friedberg’s lack of timely objection into acquiescence to the terms of the
agreement as interpreted by DDT. Although, as we have explained, the rule--if
applicable--would have overcome Freidberg’s affirmative statute of frauds defense, that
is all it would have done. To prevail on a contract theory, the document that is not
promptly disputed must, either of itself or combined with other evidence, establish the
terms of a contract. (See, e.g., Cook Grains, Inc. v. Fallis (1965) 239 Ark. 962, 963 [395
S.W.2d 555, 556] [if a merchant, a party “would be liable on the alleged contract because
he did not, within ten days, give written notice that he rejected it,” which would
undermine his statute of fraud defense]; Pecker Iron Works, Inc. v. Sturdy Concrete Co.
(1978) 96 Misc.2d 998, 1000- 1002 [410 N.Y.S.2d 251, 252-254] [similar].)
In this case, DDT’s invoice merely lists items claimed to be owed and is not in the
form of a contract. After explaining the differences between the prior and current
transactions between the parties, the trial court found the invoice did not create a contract,
that is, it was not “a sequence of conduct . . . between the parties . . . that is fairly to be
regarded as establishing a common basis of understanding for interpreting their
expressions and other conduct.” (§ 1303, subd. (b); C9 Ventures v. SVC-West, L.P.
(2012) 202 Cal.App.4th 1483, 1497-1498 (C9 Ventures).) The trial court also found the
communications between DDT and Freidberg did not address “price or terms or attorney
fees or interest.” Because this is a judgment roll appeal and DDT bore the burden of
proof at trial (see Evid. Code, § 500), the findings to the effect that terms critical to
establishing a contract were not proven is unassailable.
Moreover, the statute of frauds as to which the prompt-dispute rule pertains
applies to “a contract for the sale of goods for the price of . . . $500 or more.” (§ 2201,
subd. (1).) Under the UCC, “goods” means “all things (including specially manufactured
goods) which are movable at the time of identification to the contract for sale other than
8
the money in which the price is to be paid, investment securities (Division 8) and things
in action.” (§ 2105, subd. (1).) Thus, services are not goods.
The trial court found Freidberg sought “computer document extraction” services
from DDT. It is true DDT’s invoice included a $99 charge for a hard drive, but the vast
bulk of the claimed charges were for services. These include repairing corrupt files at an
hourly rate, and four separate charges at a per-page rate for: converting files to another
format, adding Bates numbering, adding optical character recognition, and exporting e-
mail data to another format. Although these later four charges each exceed $500, they
are not “goods,” such as the cost of printing copies or the like.
In considering a “mixed” contract for goods and services, we must look to the
“predominate” object of the contract. (1 Williston, supra, p. 124, & fn. 12.) “In
determining whether the agreement was for the sale of goods or the provision of services,
‘ “we must look to the ‘essence’ of the agreement. When service predominates, the
incidental sale of items of personal property[] does not alter the basic transaction.” ’ ”
(Wall Street Network, Ltd. v. New York Times Co. (2008) 164 Cal.App.4th 1171, 1186;
see C9 Ventures, supra, 202 Cal.App.4th at p. 1494.)
Under this test, it has been held that a contract for making copies of a motion
picture, or audio tapes, is not a contract for the sale of goods, even where there is a per-
unit charge for performing the service of duplicating the relevant media. (See
Filmservice Laboratories, Inc. v. Harvey Bernhard Enterprises, Inc. (1989) 208
Cal.App.3d 1297, 1305-1306.) We find that reasoning applicable here, where the
“essence” of what Freidberg asked for, and what DDT supplied, was DDT’s technical
expertise in retrieving, repairing, and modifying electronic data for use in litigation.5
________________________________________________________________
5
DDT argued in the trial court that the fact sales tax was charged and the hard drive it
produced is a tangible item that was prepared in order to be admitted into evidence at a
trial demonstrates that goods were at issue. But as we have explained, the appropriate
9
Accordingly, DDT has failed to show that the UCC applied to this transaction.
In a subsidiary argument, DDT contends that after the trial court determined the
invoice price was unconscionable, the trial court still should have awarded “reasonable
attorneys fees, costs, and interest” because those other terms of the purported contract
between merchants were not shown to be unconscionable. (See Civ. Code, § 1670.5,
subd. (a).) We reject this claim, because it rests on the view that the trial court was
obligated to find an enforceable contract existed, a view which we do not accept.
II
Pleading Breach of Contract
On appeal, DDT insists that the trial court misunderstood the breadth of its
common counts claim, which it contends embraced a theory of breach of contract. We
agree with DDT that pleading both a generic common counts claim and a specific breach
of contract claim may be done, inter alia, when, “The two counts, though based on the
same cause of action, are designed to seek different remedies on distinct legal theories.”
(4 Witkin, Cal. Procedure, supra, § 568, p. 693.) This may be done prophylactically, so
that if one theory fails, recovery may be had on the other. (See, e.g., Zint v. Topp
Industries, Inc. (1960) 184 Cal.App.2d 240, 243 [no express contract found, but quantum
meruit awarded on “contract implied . . . for services rendered”].)
The tentative statement of decision recites that the parties agreed the appropriate
common count was quantum meruit, the case did not involve an implied-in-fact contract,
and DDT had not pleaded a claim under the UCC. DDT objected, in part contending that
the trial court misunderstood the scope of the complaint. DDT argued it was not required
to plead a separate UCC count, and that the typed addition to the form complaint,
referencing “the attached contract/statement between the parties . . . as between
legal test is to discern the predominate purpose of the transaction, as Freidberg correctly
argued in the trial court.
10
merchants,” adequately alleged a contract for the sale of goods under the UCC;6 further,
the trial court incorrectly viewed common counts and quantum meruit “as
interchangeable terms.” DDT also contended the invoice established an enforceable
written contract (by application of the prompt-dispute rule, a theory we have already
discussed and rejected in Part I ante).
However, the final statement of decision recites that “At the conclusion of the
trial, the Court confirmed with [DDT’s] counsel on the record that he was in fact
proceeding on a common count theory and not breach of contract.” (Italics added.) This
is ambiguous because, as DDT correctly points out, a common count theory can be
breach of contract. But because this is a judgment-roll appeal, DDT cannot refute the
trial court’s finding that DDT disclaimed reliance on its theory of breach at the end of
trial. (See Estate of Kievernagel, supra, 166 Cal.App.4th at p. 1031.)7
Moreover, DDT’s pleading practice undermines its contention on appeal that it
consistently pursued a breach of contract theory in the trial court. The standard Judicial
Council form for “COMPLAINT—Contract” includes boxes to be checked to specify
whether the claim is a “Breach of Contract” or “Common Counts,” or “Other.” (Judicial
Council Forms, form PLD-C-001, p. 2.) DDT used this form, but checked only the box
specifying that the claim was for common counts. Consistent with this election, DDT
attached the appropriate companion form for “Cause of Action—Common Counts,” but
________________________________________________________________
6
In its briefing on this point, DDT misquotes its cross-complaint so that it references an
“attached contract” rather than an “attached contract/statement.” DDT’s redaction is
misleading because the only purported written contract was DDT’s invoice, which would
only be treated as a contract if the UCC applied as DDT argued. The presence of the
alternative classification of the attached invoice as a “statement” is significant here.
7
The fact DDT objected to one part of the tentative decision (to the effect that the parties
agreed quantum meruit was the correct recovery) does not equate to an objection to the
trial court’s later statement that DDT disclaimed its theory of breach, contrary to its
suggestion.
11
did not attach the separate form for “Cause of Action—Breach of Contract.” (See id.,
forms PLD-C-001(1) & 001(2).) Thus, taking DDT’s form complaint at face value,
because DDT refrained from checking the box to allege a breach of contract, and
refrained from attaching the appropriate form to allege a breach of contract, it is difficult
to find it did plead a breach of contract. We perceive no good reason for DDT not to
plead both theories by checking the correct boxes and attaching the correct forms, if it
really intended to pursue both theories of recovery.8
A statement of decision “covers only issues litigated in the case.” (Colony Ins.
Co. v. Crusader Ins. Co. (2010) 188 Cal.App.4th 743, 750.) Based both on DDT’s
counsel’s presumed disclaimer at the end of trial as described by the statement of
decision, and our examination of the pleadings, we cannot on this record find the trial
court erred by concluding a theory of breach of contract was not at issue.
Moreover, whether or not a contract theory was properly pleaded or disclaimed,
because the trial court found on the facts that neither the invoice nor the communications
between the DDT and Freidberg employees established the price or other significant
terms, DDT’s purported theory of breach would have failed in any event. Accordingly,
any error by the trial court in construing DDT’s amended cross-complaint provides no
basis for reversal. (See Cal. Const., art. VI, § 13; Code Civ. Proc., § 475; Mayes v.
Sturdy Northern Sales, Inc. (1979) 91 Cal.App.3d 69, 83.)
________________________________________________________________
8
We also note that DDT did not move to amend its cross-complaint to conform to proof.
(See Code Civ. Proc., § 469; 5 Witkin, supra, Pleading, § 1211, pp. 643-645.)
12
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. Appellant DDT shall pay respondent Freidberg’s costs
on appeal. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a)(1).)
/s/
Duarte, J.
We concur:
/s/
Hull, Acting P. J.
/s/
Murray, J.
13