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[PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
________________________
No. 19-11648
________________________
D.C. Docket No. 1:15-cv-02504-SCJ
CARADIGM USA LLC,
Plaintiff - Appellee,
versus
PRUITTHEALTH, INC.,
formerly known as UHS-Pruitt Corp.,
Defendant - Appellant.
________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Georgia
________________________
(July 10, 2020)
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Before MARTIN, NEWSOM, and O’SCANNLAIN,* Circuit Judges.
NEWSOM, Circuit Judge:
This is the story of a deal gone south. PruittHealth, Inc., a healthcare
provider, was looking for a new way to organize its patient data; Caradigm USA
LLC is in the business of delivering software solutions to healthcare providers.
The companies executed a contract pursuant to which Pruitt would pay Caradigm
to pull patient information from Pruitt’s various systems and organize it so that
each patient’s medical and billing records would be available in one place.
But alas. A little more than six months in, Pruitt grew dissatisfied with
Caradigm’s progress and announced that it was walking away from the project.
Caradigm informed Pruitt that it stood ready to perform and warned Pruitt that it
couldn’t just unilaterally ditch the contract. Pruitt didn’t respond, and Caradigm
eventually sued. The district court decided on summary judgment that Pruitt had
anticipatorily breached the contract and that Caradigm was therefore entitled to the
full value of the deal. Because that value was uncertain, the district court left the
issue of damages for trial. After a four-day trial, a jury awarded Caradigm $11
million, which included contract damages, compound interest on those damages,
and attorney’s fees and expenses.
*
Honorable Diarmuid F. O’Scannlain, United States Circuit Judge for the Ninth Circuit, sitting
by designation.
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On appeal, Pruitt doesn’t contest the district court’s determination that it
breached, but it does contend that the district court erred in numerous ways leading
up to the jury’s verdict, which, it says, resulted in an overstated damages award
and erroneous awards of interest and fees. We conclude that the district court did
not reversibly err in most of the ways that Pruitt claims, and we will therefore
affirm the awards of contract damages and fees, as well as the determination that
Caradigm is entitled to recover interest on the damages award. Because we hold
that it was error to compound the interest, however, we will vacate that award and
remand for the district court to calculate interest in simple terms.
I
A
PruittHealth, Inc. is a private, for-profit healthcare provider dealing mostly
in home healthcare, skilled-nursing facilities, and hospices. Pruitt was looking for
a new way to store its patient records, which were located across multiple systems
and difficult to access for billing and treatment purposes. Caradigm USA LLC is a
software company that services healthcare providers. As relevant here, Pruitt was
particularly interested in one service that Caradigm offered—the “Amalga
Platform”—which could aggregate patients’ clinical and financial information.
Pruitt and Caradigm executed an agreement pursuant to which Caradigm
would pull patient information from Pruitt’s separate data systems and aggregate it
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so that each patient’s medical and billing records would be accessible in a single
platform. The contract provided the legal framework for the agreement, defined
important terms, included an order form showing the goods and services that Pruitt
purchased, and explained the details of how the parties would implement
Caradigm’s software. 1 The contract also contemplated a crucial turning point—
“First Productive Use”—when Pruitt would initially employ Caradigm’s software
“to process actual patient data in a live production environment.”
After First Productive Use—and this is important to the damages dispute
before us—the contract provided for a significant increase in monthly payments.
The order form specified that Pruitt’s subscription to the Amalga Platform would
cost $64,649 per month, based on “[m]edium” usage, with payments “starting on
First Productive Use.” 2 Pruitt’s medium subscription size was calculated based on
three metrics: the number of data feeds (i.e., inbound electronic data from Pruitt’s
information systems), the number of messages (i.e., transmission of certain files)
per day, and the number of permitted users. So, the more feeds, messages, and
users, the bigger the platform size that Pruitt would need (and vice versa). The
1
The parties refer to the three parts of the agreement as the “Order Form,” the “Cloud Services
Agreement,” and the “Statement of Work.” We will simply refer to the three parts collectively
as “the contract” or “the agreement.”
2
It also stated that Pruitt would pay $4,000 per month for a “Pre-First Productive Use Hosting
Fee” (beginning from the project’s “kick-off” and continuing until First Productive Use),
$20,000 per month for an Amalga Development License (beginning when the contract took
effect), and other costs for services provided by Caradigm.
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agreement stated that each quarter, “Caradigm w[ould] review [Pruitt’s] actual
usage” against the capacity level for its then-current platform size, and “[i]f each
metric f[ell] below its threshold for a lower [platform] size, then [Pruitt] w[ould]
be moved down” a size and charged fees for that smaller size the next quarter. The
agreement also provided for the opposite: If any metric was exceeded in a quarter,
Pruitt would be moved up a platform size. By its terms, the agreement was set to
“run for an Initial Term ending five years after the date of First Productive Use.”
But the project never reached First Productive Use. An early step in the
implementation of Caradigm’s software called for Pruitt to send Caradigm a data
sample so that Caradigm could test its ability to match patient files coming from
disparate sources (i.e., the “patient matching” process). Pruitt was apparently
disappointed with the results of an initial patient-matching test in December 2014.
Caradigm’s internal communications show that, as of January 23, 2015, it planned
to offer Pruitt two options with regard to patient matching: Pruitt could either (1)
continue with Caradigm’s “basic patient matching as described in the proposal,”
which “include[d] basic support (in house, no third party),” with any
“[e]nhancements” and additional services to be billed separately, or (2) purchase a
third-party matching system, which had more “bells and whistles.”
Caradigm was never able to present those options to Pruitt. On January 29,
Pruitt’s Chief Information Officer, Dan Martin, telephoned Caradigm account
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executive Tina Mirkheshti to notify her that Pruitt was likely to abandon the
project. Less than a month later—on February 17—Pruitt sent Caradigm a
confirmatory email stating, in relevant part:
[W]e have suspended all efforts dedicated to this project and that
includes the utilization of your services. Therefore the contract you
have with PruittHealth is no longer valid. In addition regarding
payments, we will make our final payment for January date(s) of
service, and this will fulfill our economic commitment under the
agreement.
About a month after Pruitt’s email—on March 16—Caradigm sent Pruitt a letter
stating, among other things, that Pruitt didn’t “have a unilateral right to terminate
the Agreement during the Agreement’s five-year initial term” and that Pruitt’s
“purported termination would therefore constitute a breach . . . result[ing] in the
acceleration of payments owed to Caradigm for the contracted five-year period.”
Caradigm’s letter also stated that it stood “ready, willing, and able to continue to
fulfill [its] obligations under the Agreement.”
Caradigm says—and Pruitt doesn’t dispute—that Pruitt never responded to
the March 16 letter. Caradigm sent Pruitt seven invoices (for a total of $287,000)
that Pruitt neither disputed nor paid. Pruitt paid Caradigm for fees that accrued
through March 2015, but no more.
B
In July 2015, Caradigm sued Pruitt for breach of contract in the U.S. District
Court for the Northern District of Georgia. Caradigm alleged that Pruitt had
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anticipatorily breached, entitling Caradigm to the contract’s full value, plus interest
and attorney’s fees. After discovery, the parties filed dueling summary judgment
motions. The district court decided that Pruitt had anticipatorily repudiated the
contract before Caradigm’s performance was required, and that Pruitt was
therefore liable for breach. Because the value of the contract wasn’t clear, though,
the district court left the issue of damages for trial.
Before trial, Pruitt sought clarification regarding Caradigm’s burden to
prove damages—specifically, whether Caradigm had to “prove to a reasonable
certainty that it would have satisfactorily performed its obligations under the
Agreement” and that “First Productive Use would have been achieved.”
Defendant’s Motion for Clarification at 1–2, 4. The district court held that, under
Georgia law, the entire value of the agreement became due at the moment Pruitt
breached, and that the value hinged on the point at which the parties moved from
the pre-First Productive Use phase to the “going live” phase. Dist. Ct. Order on
Motion for Clarification at 2–3. Thus, the court concluded that Caradigm would
have “to show a jury, with reasonable certainty, the time frame in which the pre-
First Productive Use phase would likely have concluded.” Id. at 2. In so holding,
the district court made two things clear concerning Caradigm’s burden: (1)
Caradigm didn’t have to show Pruitt’s subjective satisfaction in order to prove that
the project would have moved forward to First Productive Use because “Pruitt’s
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performance under the contract was not conditioned on its satisfaction” and “the
contract lacked any ‘subjective satisfaction’ requirement”; and (2) by breaching,
Pruitt “absolved Caradigm of remedying any issues that Pruitt had with the
performance of the software platform.” Id. at 2–3, 4.
Over the course of a four-day trial, Caradigm called as witnesses (1) Tina
Mirkheshti, who had managed the Pruitt contract; (2) a damages expert; and (3) its
counsel (to testify regarding attorney’s fees). Mirkheshti testified that Caradigm
would have performed the agreement successfully and on time if Pruitt hadn’t
breached and that Pruitt ignored her calls and emails after Martin had told her that
Pruitt was likely backing out. Caradigm’s expert explained his damages
calculations and said that they were supported by Caradigm’s confidence that it
would have performed the contract on time. When Caradigm rested, Pruitt made a
motion for judgment as a matter of law, which the district court denied. Pruitt
didn’t call any witnesses of its own.
The jury awarded Caradigm $11,110,580.11, which comprised $5,105,582
in contract damages, $3,686,016 in compound interest, and $2,318,982.11 in
attorney’s fees and expenses under Georgia Code Annotated § 13-6-11, which
provides for fee awards against “stubbornly litigious” parties. Pruitt filed a
renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law and, in the alternative, a motion
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for a new trial or to alter or amend the judgment—both of which the district court
denied.
This is Pruitt’s appeal.
II
Pruitt argues that the district court erred in several ways in the run-up to and
during the damages trial, which it alleges led to an overstated contract-damages
award and to erroneous awards of interest and attorney’s fees. 3 Pruitt’s challenges
require us to examine a whole host of issues, including the proper interpretation of
the parties’ contract, exclusions of evidence, and jury instructions. As we will
explain, after carefully considering each of Pruitt’s contentions, we conclude that,
in the main, the district court did not reversibly err, and we will therefore affirm
the awards of contract damages and fees, as well as the determination that
Caradigm is entitled to recover interest on the damages award. Because we further
conclude, however, that it was error to compound the interest, we will vacate that
award and remand so that the district court can calculate simple interest.
3
“We review a district court’s ruling on a motion for judgment as a matter of law under Rule
50 de novo, examining the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.”
Optimum Techs., Inc. v. Henkel Consumer Adhesives, Inc., 496 F.3d 1231, 1251 (11th Cir.
2007). A ruling on a motion for a new trial is reviewed for abuse of discretion. McGinnis v. Am.
Home Mortg. Servicing, Inc., 817 F.3d 1241, 1255 (11th Cir. 2016).
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A
Pruitt first contends that the jury’s award of more than $5 million in contract
damages is exaggerated for three reasons: The district court, Pruitt says, (1) erred
in its construction of the parties’ obligations under contract, (2) held Caradigm to a
lower burden of proof than it should have, and (3) erred in excluding evidence
suggesting that Caradigm’s future revenues might have decreased. We take each
argument in turn.
1
Pruitt asserts that the parties’ contract did two particular things: (a) it
guaranteed Pruitt’s right to test Caradigm’s software to its satisfaction as a
precondition to the project reaching First Productive Use; and (b) it obligated
Caradigm to provide a certain level of accuracy in patient matching. Had the
district court interpreted the contract to account for these requirements, Pruitt says,
the jury could have found that the project wouldn’t have reached First Productive
Use and, accordingly, that Pruitt wouldn’t have owed Caradigm damages for fees
that would have been incurred only after that milestone. As we read the contract, it
didn’t do either of the two things Pruitt thinks it did.4
4
We review the district court’s interpretation of the contract de novo. Grange Mut. Cas. Co. v.
Woodard, 861 F.3d 1224, 1230 (11th Cir. 2017).
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Before we address the particular contractual provisions at issue and explain
why we reject Pruitt’s reading, we start with a primer on Georgia contract law,
which governs the parties’ agreement here. The Georgia Code states that “[t]he
cardinal rule of construction is to ascertain the intention of the parties” and that,
“[i]f that intention is clear and it contravenes no rule of law and sufficient words
are used to arrive at the intention, it shall be enforced irrespective of all technical
or arbitrary rules of construction.” Ga. Code Ann. § 13-2-3. Accordingly,
“[w]henever the language of a contract is plain, unambiguous, and capable of only
one reasonable interpretation, no construction is required or even permissible, and
the contractual language used by the parties must be afforded its literal meaning.”
First Data POS, Inc. v. Willis, 546 S.E.2d 781, 784 (Ga. 2001); see also Atlanta
Multispecialty Surgical Assocs., LLC v. DeKalb Med. Ctr., Inc., 615 S.E.2d 166,
167 (Ga. Ct. App. 2005) (“Where the terms of a contract are unambiguous, the
court must enforce it literally, even if one party contends that he understood the
contract to mean something else.”).
When interpreting a particular contractual provision, we must examine it in
the context of other provisions and the contract as a whole. See Ga. Code Ann.
§ 13-2-2(4) (“[T]he whole contract should be looked to in arriving at the
construction of any part.”); Archer W. Contractors, Ltd. v. Estate of Pitts, 735
S.E.2d 772, 777 (Ga. 2012) (“[T]he context in which a contractual term
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appears always must be considered in determining the meaning of the term.”). The
meaning and reach of one contract provision can thus be limited by others. See,
e.g., Sheridan v. Crown Capital Corp., 554 S.E.2d 296, 299 (Ga. Ct. App. 2001)
(explaining that one section of a contract “should be construed in pari materia”
with another to define and limit the meaning of the first section). With these
principles in mind, we turn to the contractual provisions at issue.
a
We first address the contract’s “testing” clause, which Pruitt says gave it a
right to demand subjective satisfaction with its testing of Caradigm’s software
before the project could proceed to First Productive Use. In pertinent part, that
clause provides:
Following Installation, [Pruitt] may test the Cloud Services to
determine whether they perform in material conformance with the
Documentation. . . . With regard to Customer Use Cases, [Pruitt] will
notify Caradigm when testing has been satisfactorily completed and
[Pruitt] is ready for Caradigm to move the Customer Use Case to the
production environment.5
5
The contract defines a “Use Case” as a “Cloud Services configuration that incorporates Data
Feeds with designated views to address specific issues within [Pruitt] or [Pruitt] Facilities” and
specified that “Use Cases include Caradigm’s standard use cases and use cases customized for
[Pruitt], as well as use cases developed by [Pruitt] under the [development license].” It further
defines a “Customer Use Case” as “any Use Case developed by or for [Pruitt] or customized for
[Pruitt].”
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Presumably relying on the language that it will notify Caradigm “when testing has
been satisfactorily completed,” Pruitt construes the testing clause as a
“[s]atisfaction [c]lause.” See Br. of Appellant at 30. We disagree.
In general, “a provision in a contract requiring the performance of one party
to be satisfactory to the other is valid and enforceable.” Commercial Mortg. &
Fin. Corp. v. Greenwich Sav. Bank, 145 S.E.2d 249, 251 (Ga. Ct. App. 1965).
Pruitt cites Atlanta Realty Co. v. Campion for the proposition that “[w]here one
contracting party agrees to perform services ‘to the satisfaction of’ or ‘satisfactory
to’ the other party, compliance with the contract is not shown unless it appears that
the thing done or the article furnished does in fact satisfy the other party.” 93
S.E.2d 781, 782 (Ga. Ct. App. 1956).
The testing clause’s language, however, convinces us that it is not a
satisfaction clause, as Pruitt contends. It doesn’t read like a promise on
Caradigm’s part to “perform services ‘to the satisfaction of’ or ‘satisfactory to’”
Pruitt, id., and it looks nothing like the satisfaction clauses that Georgia courts
have enforced. The testing clause, for instance, doesn’t set up an “if . . . then”
proposition—say, that “if testing is not satisfactory to Pruitt, then Pruitt shall have
the right to cancel.” Cf. Yon v. City of Atlanta, 41 S.E.2d 516, 519 (Ga. 1947)
(enforcing a provision in a lease stating that “if said premises and the merchandise
sold therein are not up to a reasonable standard . . . [a designated] committee shall
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have the right and option, on behalf of the lessor, to declare this contract void”).
Nor does it state that the project would reach First Productive Use “if testing
proved satisfactory” or “if Caradigm performed to Pruitt’s satisfaction.” Cf.
Mackenzie v. Minis, 63 S.E. 900, 902–03 (Ga. 1909) (enforcing a satisfaction
clause in an employment contract stating that the employment period would be at
least three years if the employee “prove[d] himself competent and satisfactory” and
performed according “to [his employer’s] satisfaction”). To the contrary, the
testing clause states that Pruitt “will notify Caradigm when testing has been
satisfactorily completed” and Pruitt “is ready” for next steps. If anything, the
clause reads like a promise on Pruitt’s part—i.e., an “expression of an intention
that some future performance will be rendered.” First Nat’l Bank of DeKalb Cty.
v. Nat’l Bank of Ga., 290 S.E.2d 55, 57 (Ga. 1982).
Even if the testing clause’s language was ambiguous, reading the clause in
the larger context of the contract confirms that it didn’t give Pruitt a right to
demand subjective satisfaction. Take the “Term & Termination” clause, which
stated, as relevant here:
This Agreement will run for an Initial Term ending five years after the
date of First Productive Use of the Amalga Platform, which will
automatically renew for successive 12-month Renewal Terms unless
either party provides written notice of non-renewal at least 90 days
before the end of the then-current Term. . . . Either party may
terminate this Agreement or any Order if the other party commits a
material breach of this Agreement or the applicable Order that
remains uncured for 90 days after written notice of such breach.
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This clause provides two important insights into the parties’ intent. First, the
contract was anticipated to run through First Productive Use. The language stating
that the contract “will run” for a specified term “after . . . First Productive Use”
evinces the parties’ shared expectation that the project would in fact reach First
Productive Use and makes clear that reaching First Productive Use was not
conditioned on satisfactory testing. Second, a party could terminate the contract
only under particular circumstances and by following particular procedures—one
party must have “commit[ted] a material breach,” then there must have been
“written notice” of that breach, and finally the breach must have “remain[ed]
uncured for 90 days.” There is no suggestion that Pruitt’s dissatisfaction provided
a separate basis for termination. Even if there were, there is no evidence—so far as
we can tell—that Pruitt provided Caradigm “written notice” of its dissatisfaction.
Pruitt’s reading of the testing clause also wouldn’t make sense as a practical
matter because its satisfaction depended, at least in part, on its own work. This is
so for two reasons. First, Pruitt was ultimately responsible for the quality of the
data fed into Caradigm’s software, which, in turn, would impact the accuracy of
patient matching. Another clause of the contract, which we’ll explain in detail
later, made clear that Pruitt was “solely responsible . . . for verifying the accuracy
and adequacy of information and data furnished for processing.” As Caradigm’s
account executive explained at trial: “[A]n algorithm is based on mathematics and
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the data that it receives. Some customers have data that we call dirtier than
other[s]. Therefore . . . you get sort of garbage in, garbage out . . . .” Trial
Transcript Vol. II at 18. Second, the testing of “Use Cases” involved testing not
only cases developed by Caradigm, but also those developed by Pruitt. Because
Pruitt purchased a development license from Caradigm, the contract defined “Use
Case[s]” to include “use cases developed by [Pruitt] under the [development
license],” and defined “Customer Use Case[s]” to include “any Use Case
developed by or for [Pruitt] or customized for [Pruitt].”
There is one final point: It seems to us clear that testing was permissive,
rather than mandatory, under the testing clause. That provision begins by stating
that Pruitt “may test” Caradigm’s software, rather than that Pruitt “shall test” or
“must test” the software. To determine whether the word “may” denotes
permission or a command in a contract, we must consider it “in connection with its
context and subject matter.” Holden v. Smith, 511 S.E.2d 569, 571 (Ga. Ct. App.
1999) (quotation omitted). As we have already explained, the testing clause is best
understood as a promise on Pruitt’s part to notify Caradigm when it had completed
testing. Because Pruitt was responsible for the quality of the data and for creating
at least some of its own use cases, it makes sense that it had the onus not only to
notify Caradigm when testing was completed but also to decide whether to test in
the first place.
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Accordingly, the testing clause did not give Pruitt a right to demand
subjective satisfaction with testing before the project proceeded to First Productive
Use. The plain language of the clause and other provisions in the contract—not to
mention practical consequences—combine to foreclose Pruitt’s interpretation. 6
b
Pruitt separately asserts that the contract obligated Caradigm to deliver a
certain level of accuracy in patient matching, and it contends that the district court
erred in reading what Pruitt calls “two disclaimers” to provide otherwise. See Br.
of Appellant at 33. Specifically, Pruitt contends that the district court erred in
relying on these provisions to hold that Caradigm wasn’t obligated to deliver
“‘robust’ patient matching.” See id.
We hold that the district court correctly read these provisions as disclaiming
any responsibility on Caradigm’s part to provide a certain level of accuracy in
6
To the extent that Pruitt’s briefs can be understood to argue that the testing clause imposed a
“condition precedent” to further performance under the contract, see, e.g., Br. of Appellant at 19
(stating that the district court “relieved Caradigm from proving that contractual conditions
precedent to certain payments would have occurred”); id. at 30 (“First Productive Use would not
occur unless Pruitt was satisfied with testing . . . .”), we reject that contention as well.
Conditions precedent are typically “indicated by words such as ‘on condition that,’ ‘if,’ and
‘provided’ (in the absence of indication to the contrary), or by an express statement to the effect
that a condition is to be construed as a condition precedent.” John K. Larkins, Georgia
Contracts: Law and Litigation § 5:4 (2d ed. 2019). The testing clause contains no words of
condition and, as we have explained, it is better read as a promise on Pruitt’s part. See Gen.
Steel, Inc. v. Delta Bldg. Sys., Inc., 676 S.E.2d 451, 454 (Ga. Ct. App. 2009) (“[C]onditions
precedent are not favored in interpreting contracts.”).
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patient matching. Let’s start with their text. The contract’s “Disclaimer of
Warranties” provision states, in relevant part:
OTHER THAN THE LIMITED WARRANTIES SET FORTH IN
SECTION 17, CARADIGM PROVIDES NO OTHER EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS WITH RESPECT TO
SOFTWARE OR SERVICES. CARADIGM DISCLAIMS ANY
IMPLIED REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES,
INCLUDING . . . CORRECTNESS OR RELIABILITY OF
PATIENT INFORMATION (INCLUDING PATIENT RECORD
MATCHING) . . . .
The other provision, titled “Medical Diagnosis, Treatment, & Billing,” states that:
[Pruitt] is solely responsible . . . for verifying the accuracy and
adequacy of information and data furnished for processing . . . .
Because patient information is maintained in multiple places . . . not
all patient information is kept in a standard fashion or is regularly
updated and, because of the statistical nature of the algorithm used to
match patient identities with their clinical information, it is possible
that false matches may occur or that there may be errors or omissions
in the clinical information.
Because the “plain” and “unambiguous” language of these provisions is
“capable of only one reasonable interpretation,” it “must be afforded its literal
meaning.” First Data, 546 S.E.2d at 784. The “Disclaimer of Warranties”
provision was written in all caps, clearly labeled as a “disclaimer,” and specifically
identified “patient record matching” as one of its objects. It clearly demonstrates
that Caradigm did not promise to deliver—and in fact, expressly disclaimed—a
certain level of “correctness or reliability” in “patient record matching.” The
“Medical Diagnoses, Treatment, & Billing” provision is likewise unambiguous. It
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warns that “false matches may occur” and that “there may be errors or omissions in
the clinical information.” This evinces the parties’ understanding that errors could
occur during the patient-matching process, not that Caradigm would deliver a
certain level of accuracy. It makes sense that the contract included these
disclaimer provisions because, as we have already explained, the accuracy of
patient matching depended at least in part on the quality of the data that Pruitt
submitted. See supra at 15–16. Indeed, the “Medical Diagnosis, Treatment, &
Billing” provision confirms as much, in making clear that Pruitt “is solely
responsible . . . for verifying the accuracy and adequacy” of the data it provided.
Pruitt attempts to evade these provisions’ plain meaning by asking us to
consider the contract as a whole and the project’s “overall vision.” See Br. of
Appellant at 33, 35. But Pruitt points to no other provision in the contract that
obligates Caradigm to provide a particular level of accuracy in patient matching.
We reject Pruitt’s contention that the contract’s warranty provision, which vaguely
states that Caradigm “warrants that . . . all Services will be performed in a
professional and workmanlike manner,” required Caradigm to deliver some
particular (but undefined) level of accuracy in patient matching. Pruitt relies on a
Georgia case holding that “it [wa]s unreasonable to allow an express warranty
contained in a contract . . . to be negated by a disclaimer of warranty in the same
contract” because “the two provisions [we]re not consistent with each other.” See
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Century Dodge, Inc. v. Mobley, 272 S.E.2d 502, 504 (Ga. Ct. App. 1980). But the
specific disclaimer and general warranty provisions here aren’t inconsistent.
Caradigm could perform “in a professional and workmanlike manner” and yet still
disclaim a particular level of accuracy in patient matching. Moreover, for reasons
already explained, we likewise reject Pruitt’s argument that the testing clause
impacts our interpretation of these provisions. See supra at 12–17. Accordingly,
we hold that the disclaimer provisions confirm that the contract did not obligate
Caradigm to deliver a certain level of patient matching. 7
2
Having dealt with Pruitt’s contract-interpretation arguments, we turn to its
contention that the district court improperly reduced Caradigm’s burden of proof at
trial. Leading up to trial, the district court held that, because Pruitt had repudiated
the contract, Caradigm didn’t have to prove “that it actually completed its
performance under the contract” but rather had to show only “that at the time of
repudiation, it had stood ready and able to perform its obligations.” Dist. Ct. Order
on Motions in Limine at 10–12. Pruitt contends that the district court wrongly
“relieved Caradigm from proving that contractual conditions precedent to certain
7
Insofar as Pruitt argues that the district court erred in excluding evidence based on its
interpretation of the disclaimer provisions, we conclude that those arguments are without merit.
The district court did not abuse its discretion in excluding evidence that was irrelevant to
damages and likely to confuse the jury. See also infra at 40–41.
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payments would have occurred but for the breach.” Br. of Appellant at 19. More
specifically, it contends that “Caradigm cannot recover damages for [payments
conditioned upon First Productive Use] unless and until Caradigm proves that First
Productive Use would have occurred but for the breach.” Id. at 26. And,
according to Pruitt, First Productive Use could have “occur[red] only when Pruitt
had satisfactorily completed testing of a Customer Use Case.” Id. at 25.
Pruitt’s burden argument—at its core—amounts to little more than a
disagreement with the way the district court interpreted the parties’ contract. As
we have explained, the testing clause can’t be read as a “satisfaction clause,” and
satisfactory testing was not a condition precedent to First Productive Use or to
further performance under the contract. See supra at 12–17 & n.6. In fact, the
contract explicitly disclaimed Caradigm’s obligation to achieve a certain level of
accuracy in patient matching. See supra at 17–20. The district court didn’t
improperly “relieve[] Caradigm from proving that contractual conditions
precedent” would have occurred—because no such conditions existed. 8
8
It’s not altogether clear whether the district court was correct in requiring Caradigm to prove
“that at the time of repudiation, it had stood ready and able to perform its obligations.” While
contract treatises generally support the “ready and able” standard, see, e,g., 23 Williston on
Contracts § 63:44 (4th ed. 2019) (“To recover damages, in addition to proving repudiation, the
nonbreaching party need only show that it would have been ready and willing to have performed
the contract, if the repudiation had not occurred.” (emphasis added)), there are indications in
Georgia law that the standard might be limited to a subset of cases, such as those in which a
plaintiff seeks specific performance, see, e.g., Kirk v. First Ga. Inv. Corp., 236 S.E.2d 254, 256
(Ga. 1977) (“A party seeking specific performance, as a condition precedent to his obtaining the
remedy, must show that he has done or offered to do, or is ready and willing to do, all the
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Once Pruitt anticipatorily repudiated the contract, Caradigm could “sue and
recover [its] entire damages.” Jinright v. Russell, 182 S.E.2d 328, 330 (Ga. Ct.
App. 1971); see also John Kimpflen, 7 Georgia Jurisprudence, Business and
Commercial Law: Contracts § 5:98 (2020) (“Where there has been an anticipatory
breach of a contract, the injured party is not limited to a recovery of the mere value
of the services which such party has performed; the injured party may recover the
entire present value to the injured party of the contract.”). In general, “[t]he object
of giving damages to the plaintiff is to put him in as good a position as if the
defendant had fully performed the contract.” PMS Constr. Co. v. DeKalb Cty., 257
S.E.2d 285, 288 (Ga. 1979). This rule applies equally to cases of anticipatory
breach. See Redman Dev. Corp. v. Piedmont Heating & Air Conditioning, Inc.,
197 S.E.2d 167, 170–71 (Ga. Ct. App. 1973) (stating that in an “anticipatory
breach” case, “the doctrine of contractual compensatory damages seeks as its goal
to make the injured party whole,” which means that “the person injured, is, so far
as it is possible to do so by a monetary award, to be placed in the position he would
have been in had the contract been performed” (quotation omitted)). Accordingly,
Caradigm was entitled to damages that would put it “in as good a position as if
material acts required of him by the contract.”). We needn’t decide that issue here. Even if the
“ready and able” standard applies here, Caradigm presented sufficient evidence at trial for the
jury to find that it could perform the agreement on time and that it had the technical ability to
deliver what the contract required.
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[Pruitt] had fully performed the contract,” PMS Constr. Co., 257 S.E.2d at 288,
meaning that Caradigm was entitled to fees that it would have been paid after First
Productive Use.
Even if completed testing or First Productive Use could be interpreted as a
condition precedent to further performance—as the district court (we think
erroneously) seemed to assume—Pruitt wouldn’t fare any better. A party who
anticipatorily breaches cannot use the nonoccurrence of a future contractual event
to its benefit. See Jinright, 182 S.E.2d at 330 (“A party may not repudiate a
contract and at the same time seek the advantage of a stipulation in the very
contract he has repudiated.”). While Pruitt argues that this principle applies only to
the determination of liability, we read Georgia law as embracing a general rule that
applies in anticipatory repudiation cases—whether in determining liability or
awarding damages. See, e.g., John K. Larkins, Georgia Contracts: Law and
Litigation § 11:5 (2d ed. 2019) (“Where the contract is contingent on the
occurrence of a future event, the repudiating party cannot claim the benefit of the
contingency so as to avoid any claim of damages.” (emphasis added) (citing
Textile Rubber & Chemical Co. v. Thermo-Flex Techs., Inc., 687 S.E.2d 919 (Ga.
Ct. App. 2009))). Accordingly, Pruitt couldn’t claim that the project would never
have reached First Productive Use as a shield to avoid damages because it
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repudiated the contract before Caradigm had a chance to perform. Jinright, 182
S.E.2d at 330.
3
On, then, to Pruitt’s final challenge to the contract-damages award. Pruitt
argues that the district court erred in excluding evidence regarding the variable
nature of Caradigm’s expected revenues under the agreement—specifically,
evidence that Pruitt’s use of the software might have decreased, and that Pruitt
might have been downsized from the more expensive “medium” platform to the
less expensive “small” platform. The district court excluded Pruitt’s proposed
evidence on the basis of its pretrial order on the parties’ motions in limine, which
had held that because Pruitt anticipatorily repudiated, it couldn’t “invoke
conditions precedent in the contract to avoid damages.”9 Dist. Ct. Order on
Motions in Limine at 25.
We disagree that the agreement regarding variable pricing constituted a
“condition precedent” that fell under the district court’s prior order. The contract
did provide that “[i]f” certain metrics of Pruitt’s use (i.e., the number of data feeds,
the number of users, and the number of messages) changed, that Pruitt would “be
9
We review the district court’s exclusion of evidence for abuse of discretion. Furcron v. Mail
Ctrs. Plus, LLC, 843 F.3d 1295, 1304 (11th Cir. 2016). Evidentiary rulings “will be affirmed
unless the district court has made a clear error of judgment or has applied an incorrect legal
standard.” Id. (quotation omitted).
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moved up” or “be moved down” a platform size. Cf. Larkins, supra, § 5:4 (stating
that conditions precedent are often indicated by words of condition, such as “if”).
Even so, we don’t think that Pruitt’s metrics changing could be construed as a
condition precedent—that is, a condition that “must be performed before the
contract becomes absolute and obligatory upon the other party.” Ga. Code Ann.
§ 13-3-4 (defining “condition precedent”). Rather than creating a condition that
had to occur for further performance to take place, the variable-pricing agreement
is better understood as an accommodation between the parties about the details of
payment. Cf. Callaway v. Garner, 755 S.E.2d 526, 532 (Ga. Ct. App. 2014)
(“Georgia courts have long recognized a material distinction between a condition
precedent and a mere accommodation between the parties over the timing of
payment.”), vacated in part on other grounds, 776 S.E.2d 829 (Ga. Ct. App. 2015).
Therefore, by repudiating the contract, Pruitt didn’t forgo its declining-fees
argument, and the district court shouldn’t have excluded the evidence on the basis
it did. 10
But of course “[n]ot every evidentiary error . . . requires reversal.” Peat, Inc.
v. Vanguard Research, Inc., 378 F.3d 1154, 1162 (11th Cir. 2004). We have held
10
Caradigm asserts that Pruitt admitted to its fees being fixed at the medium size. Pruitt did state
at the district court that First Productive Use would “lock[] Pruitt into a five-year [term]” at the
medium-sized-platform price, but the pretrial order stated that the contract didn’t have “a defined
value or fixed duration” and provided for monthly fees “tied to enumerated benchmarks.” We
therefore reject Caradigm’s argument that Pruitt has made a clear admission on this point.
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that “a new trial is warranted only” where an error in admitting or excluding
evidence “has caused substantial prejudice to the affected party (or, stated
somewhat differently, affected the party’s ‘substantial rights’ or resulted in
‘substantial injustice’).” Id.; see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 61 (“Unless justice requires
otherwise, no error in admitting or excluding evidence—or any other error by the
court or a party—is ground for granting a new trial, for setting aside a verdict, or
for vacating, modifying, or otherwise disturbing a judgment or order. At every
stage of the proceeding, the court must disregard all errors and defects that do not
affect any party’s substantial rights.”).
Pruitt contends that it was prejudiced by the district court’s exclusion of the
declining-fees evidence because, had that evidence been admitted, “the jury would
have had a compelling basis to award Caradigm hundreds of thousands, if not
millions, in damages less than it did.” Br. of Appellant at 29. In determining
whether Pruitt was substantially prejudiced, we must consider “how much of an
effect . . . the improperly . . . excluded evidence ha[d] on the verdict.” Peat, 378
F.3d at 1162; see also Furcron v. Mail Ctrs. Plus, LLC, 843 F.3d 1295, 1304 (11th
Cir. 2016) (“Substantial rights are affected if one cannot say, with fair
assurance . . . that the judgment was not substantially swayed by the error.”
(alteration in original) (quotation omitted)). In answering that question, we may
consider, among other factors, “the closeness of the factual disputes (i.e., the
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strength of the evidence on the issues affected by the error).” Peat, 378 F.3d at
1162.
Our review convinces us that any error that the district court made in
excluding Pruitt’s proposed declining-fees evidence was harmless. One document
Pruitt sought to admit was a Caradigm PowerPoint stating that Pruitt
“[a]nticipate[d] 50 users for Concurrent Bill Review Use Case and 20 Users for
Clinical Use Case pilot”—numbers, Pruitt says, that reflected a need for only a
“small” platform. But that same document—indeed, on the very next page—
acknowledged that the contract provided for a “[m]edium” platform for a “5 year
term.” And even if the number of users specified in the PowerPoint would have
qualified Pruitt for the small platform, there’s no indication that the other two
metrics—the number of data feeds and the number of messages, see supra at 4–
5—would have decreased to such an extent that Pruitt would have moved down a
size. Pruitt cited a second document from the contract’s Statement of Work, which
estimated that Pruitt would use “10 data feeds.” But that estimate appears to
pertain to just one of Pruitt’s facilities, and the contract’s order form confirmed
that Pruitt needed a medium platform. Again, even if the “10 data feeds” estimate
reflected the total number of data feeds, there’s no information about the other two
metrics—the number of users and the number of messages—indicating that Pruitt
would have been moved down to the small platform.
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Caradigm, moreover, introduced evidence to rebut Pruitt’s declining-fees
argument. In cash-flow predictions that Caradigm sent to Pruitt before it was
notified of Pruitt’s repudiation, for instance, Caradigm predicted that Pruitt would
continue to use the medium-sized platform. Caradigm’s account executive also
testified that she didn’t foresee Pruitt’s use decreasing and that, in fact, “a lot of
times customers start small” and then move to a larger platform as they bring in
additional data or users. Trial Transcript Vol. I at 180.
In sum, we are not convinced that Pruitt’s “substantial rights” were affected
because “the judgment was not substantially swayed” by the district court’s
exclusion of Pruitt’s declining-fees evidence. 11 See Furcron, 843 F.3d at 1304
(quotation omitted).
* * *
Before proceeding to consider the interest and attorney’s-fees issues, we
pause briefly to recap our decision with respect to Pruitt’s contract-damages
arguments. In summary, we hold (1) that the contract didn’t give Pruitt a right to
demand subjective satisfaction with Caradigm’s performance or obligate Caradigm
to deliver a particular level of accuracy in patient matching; (2) that the district
11
Pruitt conclusorily argues that Caradigm might have provided it with credits based on
interruptions in the provision of software services, but it provides no support beyond the
assertion that it would have “cross examined Caradigm’s account executive regarding . . . credits
Caradigm has granted other customers.” Br. of Appellant at 28 n.11. If the district court made
any error in excluding this evidence, Pruitt hasn’t shown that it was substantially prejudiced.
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court didn’t improperly reduce Caradigm’s burden of proof at trial because
satisfactory testing and First Productive Use were not conditions to further
performance and, even if they were, Pruitt repudiated and thus couldn’t claim that
they wouldn’t have occurred; and (3) that the district court’s error in excluding
Pruitt’s declining-fees evidence was harmless because Pruitt has not shown that it
was prejudiced.
B
We move on, then, to consider Pruitt’s challenges regarding the jury’s award
of interest. The contract provided for interest in the “Payment Terms” provision,
which stated, in relevant part:
[Pruitt] will pay all undisputed amounts due under this Agreement in
full . . . within 30 days after the invoice date. . . . If [Pruitt], in good
faith, disputes any amounts invoiced, [Pruitt] will report such dispute
to Caradigm within 30 days of the invoice date. Failure to make
timely payment is a material breach of this Agreement . . . . Any late
amounts will be subject to interest at the lesser of 1.5% per month or
the maximum allowed by applicable law.
Pruitt contends (1) that Caradigm’s acceptance of Pruitt’s breach precluded it from
obtaining interest under the contract; (2) that Caradigm can’t recover interest
because it never invoiced Pruitt the total amount due as the interest provision
requires; and (3) that, in any event, compound interest isn’t permitted under
Georgia law unless it is specifically authorized by the contract. We take up each
argument in turn.
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1
The gist of Pruitt’s first argument is that once Caradigm accepted Pruitt’s
anticipatory repudiation, the contract—and with it, the contract’s interest
provision—was no longer operative. If Caradigm wanted to collect interest on the
agreement, the argument goes, it should have treated the contract as remaining in
force rather than treating the repudiation as a breach and suing. We disagree.
The way we read Georgia law, interest remained available under the
contract’s interest provision, even after Caradigm accepted Pruitt’s repudiation.
The cases that Pruitt cites for support simply restate the general principle that, after
a repudiation is accepted, the contract at issue “cease[s] to be in effect.” E.g.,
Legacy Acad., Inc. v. Doles-Smith Enters., Inc., 812 S.E.2d 72, 80 (Ga. Ct. App.
2018). Importantly, though, a non-breaching party’s acceptance of a repudiation
means that the contract “cease[s] to be in effect” for purposes of requiring
continued performance—the innocent party is “relieved of its obligation to
continue performing under the . . . agreement.” Id. at 77; Larkins, supra, § 11:5
(“The effect of an anticipatory repudiation is to relieve the opposite party of the
requirement to perform, or even to tender performance.” (footnote omitted)).
While accepting Pruitt’s breach relieved Caradigm from further performance of its
contractual promises, it did not preclude Caradigm from recovering interest under
the contract.
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Caradigm wasn’t required to treat the contract as remaining in force and to
sue for interest only as it accrued. Notwithstanding a repudiation, an innocent
party can sue to “recover the entire present value . . . of [the] contract,” Parker v.
King, 23 S.E.2d 575, 577 (Ga. Ct. App. 1942) (emphasis added), and Pruitt’s own
cases confirm that in those circumstances, awards can still be made under the
contract’s terms, see, e.g., Legacy, 812 S.E.2d at 74–75, 78 (stating that the
nonbreaching party could “immediately sue to recover damages for such breach,
including the present value of the future fees [i.e., monthly advertising and royalty
fees provided for in the contract]”). In the same way that an innocent party doesn’t
have to continue to perform after an anticipatory repudiation and wait to bring suit
for damages as they come, Caradigm didn’t have to wait for Pruitt’s monthly
payments to be late in order to recover interest under the contract.
2
Pruitt also contends that Caradigm isn’t entitled to contractual interest
because the agreement’s interest provision applies only to amounts that were
invoiced, and, so Pruitt says, Caradigm never sent it an invoice for the contract’s
entire value. We needn’t decide whether the contract required invoicing of the full
amount because, even assuming that Pruitt is right that invoicing was required, the
jury could nonetheless have awarded damages by finding that it would have been
“futile” for Caradigm to invoice Pruitt.
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The district court instructed the jury as follows: “[T]he law does not require
a futile or other useless act. Thus, if you find that it became futile or useless for
Caradigm to invoice Pruitt a certain amount, then you should still award
contractual interest on that amount.” Trial Transcript Vol. IV at 62. Pruitt argues
that this was error because “[f]utility under Georgia law relates to acts required by
common law—not by contract.”12 Br. of Appellant at 41 & n.18.
We hold that the district court’s futility instruction was proper under Georgia
law. For example, in Mayor & Aldermen of City of Savannah v. Batson-Cook Co.,
the Georgia Court of Appeals held that a damages award was not precluded on
account of a contractor’s failure to comply with the contract’s conditions for final
payment, which required the contractor to, among other things, “submit a final
accounting” and “submit a final application for payment.” 714 S.E.2d 242, 247
(Ga. Ct. App. 2011), rev’d on other grounds, 728 S.E.2d 189 (Ga. 2012). The
court explained that “[t]he law does not require a futile act,” and because the
parties disputed whether the contract price needed to be adjusted, “it would have
been futile for [the contractor] to comply with the[] procedural requirements for
12
We generally “review jury instructions for abuse of discretion and give trial judges wide
discretion as to the style and wording employed,” but “[w]e review jury instructions de novo to
determine whether they misstate the law or mislead the jury.” Gowski v. Peake, 682 F.3d 1299,
1310 (11th Cir. 2012) (quotation omitted). If the district court errs in its jury instructions, we
will “consider the jury instructions as a whole” to determine whether the error was reversible and
“will not overturn a jury verdict because of an erroneous jury instruction unless there is also a
showing of prejudice.” Oladeinde v. City of Birmingham, 230 F.3d 1275, 1295–96 (11th Cir.
2000) (quotation omitted).
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final payment.” Id.; see also Allen v. Henderson, 172 S.E. 94, 95 (Ga. Ct. App.
1933) (“The law does not require the doing of an unnecessary thing.”); Larkins,
supra, § 5:4 (“[U]nder some circumstances, performance of such a condition [i.e.,
conditions regarding the time of performance] may be deemed futile and therefore
excused.”). Because the district court here didn’t err as a matter of law in
instructing the jury, it had “wide discretion as to the style and wording employed,”
and it didn’t abuse its discretion. See Gowski v. Peake, 682 F.3d 1299, 1310 (11th
Cir. 2012) (quotation omitted).
Moreover, there was sufficient evidence for the jury to find that invoicing
Pruitt would have been futile. There is no dispute that Pruitt never responded to
Caradigm’s March 16, 2015 letter informing Pruitt that a breach would result in
“the acceleration of payments owed to Caradigm for the contracted five-year
period.” There’s also no evidence that Pruitt responded to or disputed other
invoices sent after Caradigm was notified of the breach—from March through July
2015. The jury could have found that there would have been no point in Caradigm
sending yet another invoice when Pruitt had failed to dispute or otherwise respond
to invoices sent over the course of the previous five months.
3
Finally—with respect to interest, anyway—we consider Pruitt’s argument
that the district court erred in allowing the jury to compound the interest award.
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Pruitt contends that Georgia law requires that the interest award be calculated in
simple terms because the parties’ contract didn’t explicitly provide for compound
interest. 13
Before addressing the merits of Pruitt’s compound-interest argument, we
must determine whether it was waived, as Caradigm contends. The district court
refused to consider Pruitt’s argument following the jury’s verdict on the ground
that Pruitt had failed to sufficiently raise the compound-interest issue. In its order
denying Pruitt’s motion for judgment as a matter of law, the court acknowledged
that the parties’ pretrial order had memorialized Pruitt’s position that “normal
damages principles would apply,” but it held that this statement was “insufficient”
to preserve an objection to compounding any interest award. In its order denying
Pruitt’s motion for a new trial or to alter or amend the judgment, the district court
further explained that Pruitt had “waived any argument regarding compound
interest by not including the issue in the pretrial order, objecting to Caradigm’s
evidence on compound interest, or moving for a directed verdict on the issue at the
close of evidence.”
We ordinarily give district courts wide discretion in enforcing the limits of
pretrial orders. See, e.g., Morro v. City of Birmingham, 117 F.3d 508, 515 (11th
13
Whether Georgia law allows compound interest to be awarded under these circumstances is a
question of law, which we review de novo. See F.T.C. v. Leshin, 618 F.3d 1221, 1231 (11th Cir.
2010).
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Cir. 1997) (“We have not hesitated to back up district courts when they put steel
behind the terms of pretrial orders and hold parties to them.”). We have
recognized that district courts must “firmly (but fairly) enforce[]” pretrial orders in
order to narrow and define the issues to be litigated at trial. Id.; see also Lexington
Ins. Co. v. Cooke’s Seafood, 835 F.2d 1364, 1368 (11th Cir. 1988) (“Given the vast
number of details competing for the attention of a federal district judge, reducing
all issues to writing before the pretrial conference substantially assists the trial
court in its ability to understand the issues and to prepare for trial.”). 14
Consequently, we have held that “[t]he decision of the trial court to modify or
enforce a pre-trial order will not be disturbed absent a showing of abuse of
discretion.” Santiago v. Lykes Bros. S.S. Co., 986 F.2d 423, 427 (11th Cir. 1993).
Based on the unique circumstances presented in this case, however, we
conclude that Pruitt didn’t waive its compound-interest argument by failing to
provide additional detail in the pretrial order. To be sure, questions of law, like
other issues, can be considered waived if not preserved in a pretrial order. Cf.
Morro, 117 F.3d at 516 n.3 (explaining that “[c]ounsel may waive the right to have
an issue decided by failing to identify the issue to the court at the pretrial
14
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 16 “provides for the effect that pretrial orders shall have.”
Morro, 117 F.3d at 515; see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(d) (“After any conference under this rule, the
court should issue an order reciting the action taken. This order controls the course of the action
unless the court modifies it.”).
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conference, regardless of whether the issue is a legal or factual one”). The
compound-interest award here, though, isn’t just a question of law, but also—as we
explain below—a routine matter with respect to which the underlying law is very
clear. Although a short statement that “normal damages principles will apply”
might not be sufficiently detailed to encompass some legal arguments, we are
satisfied that it fairly reflects the baseline assumption that under Georgia law any
award of interest would be simple, not compound. We can’t fault Pruitt for failing
to state more explicitly that simple interest should apply given—again, as we will
explain—that it clearly appears to be the default (i.e., “normal”) legal rule.
Moreover, while our precedent suggests that pretrial orders are intended to
avoid “blindsid[ing]” the district court and opposing parties, there was no
“ambush” here. Cf. id. at 512, 516 & n.3 (affirming the district court’s refusal to
consider an affirmative defense that wasn’t raised until the charge conference).
Both Caradigm and the district court were on notice prior to trial that Pruitt
believed it was entitled to a simple-interest calculation because Pruitt had stated in
its trial brief (albeit in a footnote) that “even if Caradigm persuades the jury that it
should recover prejudgment interest (whether contractual or statutory), Georgia
law requires such interest to be calculated as simple interest, not compound
interest.” Defendant’s Trial Br. at 3 n.1. Pruitt also raised the issue when cross-
examining Caradigm’s damages expert and in its renewed motion for judgment as
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a matter of law. We thus conclude that Pruitt sufficiently objected to an award of
compound interest in the district court.15
On the merits, we hold that the district court erred in awarding compound
interest. Section 13-6-13 of the Georgia Code states that “[i]n all cases where an
amount ascertained would be the damages at the time of the breach, it may be
increased by the addition of legal interest from that time until the recovery.” The
Code further defines the “legal rate of interest,” in relevant part:
(a)(1)(A) The legal rate of interest shall be 7 percent per annum
simple interest where the rate percent is not established by written
contract. Notwithstanding the provisions of other laws to the
contrary . . . the parties may establish by written contract any rate of
interest, expressed in simple interest terms . . . where the principal
amount involved is more than $3,000.00 but less than
$250,000.00 . . . .
(B) Where the principal amount is $250,000.00 or more, . . . the
parties may establish by written contract any rate of interest,
expressed in simple interest terms or otherwise, and charges to be paid
by the borrower or debtor.
Ga. Code Ann. § 7-4-2 (emphasis added). Section 7-4-2 suggests that compound
contractual interest is permissible where, as here, “the principal amount is
15
To the extent that the district court declined to consider Pruitt’s compound-interest argument
because Pruitt failed to object to Caradigm’s compound-interest evidence or move for a directed
verdict on the issue at the close of evidence, that doesn’t impact our ability to review this purely
legal issue. While “we will generally refuse to consider arguments raised for the first time on
appeal,” Ramirez v. Sec’y, U.S. Dep’t of Transp., 686 F.3d 1239, 1249 (11th Cir. 2012), as we
have explained, Pruitt raised the issue in the district court, cf. King v. PA Consulting Grp., Inc.,
485 F.3d 577, 589 (10th Cir. 2007) (holding that the plaintiff “adequately preserved [a] purely
legal question . . . by raising the matter in his trial brief”).
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$250,000.00 or more” because it states that parties may choose “any rate of
interest, expressed in simple interest terms or otherwise.” Importantly for our
purposes, though, the parties must “establish” that rate “by written contract.”
Under Georgia law, then, it’s clear that parties must explicitly agree to compound
interest in their contract.
In Noons v. Holiday Hospitality Franchising, Inc., the defendant argued that
the trial court had erred in awarding the plaintiff “interest on interest” under the
parties’ agreement, which provided for interest of “1.5% per month or the
maximum interest permitted by applicable law, whichever is less.” 705 S.E.2d
166, 170 (Ga. Ct. App. 2010) (alteration adopted). The plaintiff relied on § 7-4-16
(which governs the interest rate on “commercial accounts”) to support the
compound award, but the court held that § 7-4-16 didn’t apply to breach-of-
contract suits. Id. Accordingly, the court concluded that the plaintiff’s entitlement
to interest was “a matter governed by the contract at issue” and awarded simple
interest of 1.5% on all past-due fees. Id. The language of the contract—providing
for interest of “1.5% per month”—wasn’t clear enough to justify an award of
compound interest. Id.
Just so here. The parties’ agreement states that late amounts under the
contract would “be subject to interest at the lesser of 1.5% per month or the
maximum allowed by applicable law”—a provision almost identical to the one at
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issue in Noons. Following the Georgia Code and Noons, we hold that the language
in the contract to the effect that interest would be awarded at “1.5% per month”
does not establish that the parties agreed to compound interest. We will therefore
vacate the compound-interest award and remand for the district court to calculate
simple interest.
C
Finally—as in finally finally—attorney’s fees. The jury awarded attorney’s
fees to Caradigm on the ground that Pruitt had been “stubbornly litigious” within
the meaning of Georgia Code Annotated § 13-6-11, which states:
The expenses of litigation generally shall not be allowed as a part of
the damages; but where the plaintiff has specially pleaded and has
made prayer therefor and where the defendant has acted in bad faith,
has been stubbornly litigious, or has caused the plaintiff unnecessary
trouble and expense, the jury may allow them.
In general, a stubborn-litigiousness fee award under § 13-6-11 will be precluded if
there is evidence of a “bona fide controversy” between the parties. David G.
Brown, P.E., Inc. v. Kent, 561 S.E.2d 89, 90–91 (Ga. 2002). Pruitt asserts that the
award of attorney’s fees was erroneous because the district court (1) excluded
evidence relevant to whether a bona fide controversy existed and (2) improperly
instructed the jury on stubborn litigiousness. We consider each argument in turn.
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1
Pruitt sought to introduce two categories of evidence that it claims were
relevant to the stubborn-litigiousness issue: (a) evidence relating to its reasons for
breaching the contract; and (b) communications that took place between the parties
after Caradigm filed suit.
a
In the first category, Pruitt wanted to introduce evidence showing that it
thought it could cancel the contract because of Caradigm’s perceived inability to
provide patient matching. 16 The district court held that “[a] bona fide controversy
as to Caradigm’s patient-matching capabilities is irrelevant to whether or not there
was a bona fide controversy as to Pruitt’s belief it could terminate the contract in
the way that it did.” Dist. Ct. Order on Emergency Motion at 13–14. The court
further concluded that patient-matching evidence “would cause confusion to the
jury that even a curative instruction could not remedy.” Dist. Ct. Pretrial
Conference Order at 3.
The district court did not abuse its discretion in excluding evidence of
Pruitt’s breach and more specifically, Pruitt’s contention that Caradigm wasn’t able
16
Specifically, the evidence Pruitt sought to introduce includes Caradigm’s “abysmal patient
matching results,” Caradigm’s “recommendation that Pruitt obtain a third-party product” to aid
in patient matching, and “evidence from Caradigm’s employees that would have corroborated
and provided context for Pruitt’s understanding” of the agreement. Br. of Appellant at 51–52.
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to perform patient matching. As we’ve explained, the contract didn’t require that
Caradigm provide a certain level of accuracy in patient matching, expressly
disclaimed any implied warranties guaranteeing otherwise, and warned that there
might be false matches. See supra at 12–20. Pruitt’s subjective satisfaction with
Caradigm’s patient-matching capabilities was irrelevant to whether a bona fide
controversy existed between the parties. Moreover, and as the district court held,
any evidence in this regard would have risked confusing the jury or causing
prejudice.
Notably, Pruitt wasn’t left without recourse. The district court allowed
Pruitt to introduce evidence of its understanding of the agreement’s termination
provision and to “refer to a disagreement over a contract provision as long as it
d[id] not directly—or indirectly—allude to the quality of patient matching, its own
subjective satisfaction with patient matching, or Caradigm’s ability to provide a
particular level of patient matching.” Dist. Ct. Order on Emergency Motion at 15.
We can’t say that the district court’s handling of this evidence—including the
alternative course it left open for Pruitt—constituted an abuse of discretion.
b
Pruitt separately sought to admit four letters that the parties’ counsel
exchanged after Caradigm filed suit. In them, each party outlined its theories of
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why the other had breached and briefly discussed resolving the conflict to prevent
further litigation.
The district court rejected Pruitt’s request to amend the pretrial order to add
the letters as trial exhibits, concluding that “attorney correspondence written after
the commencement of litigation is not relevant evidence of Pruitt’s beliefs at the
time it terminated the contract or in the months thereafter,” and that post-filing
letters “may be post hoc rationalizations for a party’s behavior.” Dist. Ct. Pretrial
Conference Order at 4–5. On the eve of trial, the court refused to consider Pruitt’s
argument that the letters, although arising in post-filing communications, could be
evidence of a bona fide pre-filing controversy. While Pruitt made this argument in
a footnote in its trial brief, the court explained that “Pruitt did not make this
argument when it sought to have the pretrial order amended at the pretrial
conference (despite the Court specifically asking about this issue),” nor did it “cite
any of the case law contained in its footnote [of its trial brief].”17 Dist. Ct. Order
on Emergency Motion at 7 n.3.
The district court did not abuse its discretion in excluding the letters. On
balance, we read Georgia law as requiring that any evidence of a bona fide dispute
relate to “the conduct arising from the transaction underlying the cause of action
17
The abuse-of-discretion standard applies to our review of the district court’s evidentiary
rulings and to its decision whether to modify the pretrial order. Furcron, 843 F.3d at 1304;
Santiago, 986 F.2d at 427.
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being litigated, not conduct during the course of the litigation itself.” Brown, 561
S.E.2d at 90; see also Padgett v. Moran, 306 S.E.2d 96, 97 (Ga. Ct. App. 1983)
(“Allowance of attorney fees pursuant to [Georgia Code Annotated] § 13-6-
11 . . . based upon a party’s conduct in the course of litigation is wholly
improper.”). The letters that Pruitt sought to admit were part of the parties’
litigation conduct. They were drafted by the parties’ lawyers and written months
after Caradigm filed suit—and after the cure period provided for in the contract
had passed.
It’s true that some Georgia authority supports Pruitt’s assertion that evidence
created after a lawsuit’s filing may be relevant to whether a bona fide controversy
existed. See, e.g., Spring Lake Prop. Owners Ass’n v. Peacock, 390 S.E.2d 31, 32
(Ga. 1990) (holding that trial testimony showed that, prior to the litigation, there
was no bona fide controversy). But Pruitt didn’t make this argument when it asked
the district court to amend the pretrial order. And in any event, while it seems that
post-filing evidence could be relevant to a pre-filing dispute, the letters here so
clearly evidence litigation conduct that we are not persuaded that they accurately
reflect the parties’ pre-suit positions.
Indeed, the letters are inconsistent with other pre-litigation communications
between the parties. In the August 10, 2015 letter, Pruitt—through its counsel—
stated that it “declined to move forward with the project” because it “became
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increasingly dissatisfied” with Caradigm’s software and services. In contrast,
when notifying Caradigm that it was abandoning the project on February 17, 2015,
Pruitt didn’t suggest that it was doing so because of its dissatisfaction with
Caradigm’s capability to perform; rather, it simply told Caradigm that it had
“suspended all efforts dedicated to th[e] project” and that the contract was “no
longer valid.” 18 This inconsistency suggests that the letters—rather than
evidencing a bona fide pre-litigation dispute—were, in fact, a post hoc attempt to
explain Pruitt’s pre-litigation behavior in a way that squared with its litigation
strategy.
Thus, the district court did not err in excluding the letters as irrelevant to the
stubborn-litigiousness issue. The district court did not “ma[k]e a clear error of
judgment or . . . appl[y] an incorrect legal standard,” Furcron, 843 F.3d at 1304
(quotation omitted), and we therefore affirm its evidentiary rulings.
2
Pruitt separately argues that the district court’s jury instructions on
“stubborn litigiousness” misstated Georgia law. The jury instructions stated, in
18
Although Dan Martin might have hinted in the January 29, 2015 phone call with Tina
Mirkheshti that Pruitt was disappointed with the initial data testing, he testified in his deposition
that he also explained to her that Pruitt simply needed to put its resources on a different project.
The fact remains that in its written notice of repudiation, Pruitt made no mention of
dissatisfaction. Tellingly, Pruitt doesn’t argue in its briefs that the January 29 call is relevant to
the stubborn-litigiousness issue.
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relevant part: “Attorney fees are not authorized under [Georgia Code Annotated §]
13-6-11 if the evidence shows that a genuine dispute existed in regards to liability.
Where a bona fide controversy existed, an award of attorney’s fees is
inappropriate.” Pruitt contends that, under Georgia law, attorney’s fees could not
be awarded if the jury found a bona fide dispute existed “whether of law or fact, on
liability or amount of damages, or on any comparable issue.” Br. of Appellant at
46 (emphasis added).
On our reading, the Georgia Court of Appeals’ decisions conflict on the
question whether the bona fide dispute must be about liability alone, or whether it
can be about liability or damages. Compare, e.g., Daniel v. Smith, 597 S.E.2d 432,
438 (Ga. Ct. App. 2004) (“Our research indicates that a jury may award attorney
fees under . . . § 13-6-11 if there is no bona fide controversy as to liability, even if
there is a bona fide controversy as to damages.”), with, e.g., Hester Enters., Inc. v.
Narvais, 402 S.E.2d 333, 336 (Ga. Ct. App. 1991) (“Even if the evidence shows no
bona fide dispute as to the [defendant’s] liability for breach of the construction
contract, the evidence nevertheless shows a bona fide dispute as to the amount of
damages [the plaintiffs] were authorized to recover.”). The district court carefully
considered the conflicting cases put forward by the parties and decided that a
dictum in one Georgia Supreme Court case was the “tie-breaker.” Trial Transcript
Vol. III at 209. In that case, the court stated that “statutory recovery for stubborn
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litigiousness or causing unnecessary trouble and expense is authorized if there
exists no bona fide controversy or dispute regarding liability for the underlying
cause of action.” Brown, 561 S.E.2d at 90–91 (emphasis added).
We conclude that the district court didn’t err in relying on Brown to break
the tie. True, whether or not a bona fide controversy over damages could defeat a
stubborn litigiousness claim wasn’t squarely at issue in Brown. See id. at 89
(explaining that the issue was whether § 13-6-11 allows attorney’s fees for
appellate proceedings). But we simply can’t say that the district court reversibly
erred by relying on a dictum from the Georgia Supreme Court when faced with
diverging Georgia Court of Appeals decisions. After all, we have explained that
“[a]lthough dicta [in a state-court decision] is not binding, it can provide federal
courts with insight into a state court’s thinking.” LeFrere v. Quezada, 582 F.3d
1260, 1267 (11th Cir. 2009).
Even if we were to give Pruitt the benefit of the doubt and conclude that the
district court erred in its instruction, we wouldn’t reverse because Pruitt didn’t
suffer prejudice. See Oladeinde v. City of Birmingham, 230 F.3d 1275, 1295–96
(11th Cir. 2000) (“We will not overturn a jury verdict because of an erroneous jury
instruction unless there is also a showing of prejudice.” (quotation omitted)); see
also Jennings v. BIC Corp., 181 F.3d 1250, 1254 (11th Cir. 1999) (“[W]e will find
reversible error in the refusal to give a requested instruction only if . . . the failure
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to give the instruction resulted in prejudicial harm to the requesting party.”
(quotation omitted)). Were we to consider the excluded evidence, it doesn’t show
a bona fide pre-litigation dispute as to either liability or damages. As explained,
any evidence of Pruitt’s dissatisfaction with Caradigm’s patient matching was
irrelevant to the bona fide dispute inquiry because the contract didn’t contain a
satisfaction clause and expressly disclaimed the accuracy of patient matching. See
supra at 12–20. The post-filing letters exchanged between the parties’ lawyers are
also irrelevant with respect to whether a bona fide dispute existed before the filing
of the lawsuit. See supra at 41–44.
So far as we can tell, no other evidence produced at trial showed that there
was any bona fide pre-litigation dispute between the parties. 19 In its email
19
We reject Pruitt’s argument that it showed a bona fide dispute by “vigorously cross-
examin[ing] Caradigm’s witnesses” and challenging the amount of damages at trial. Br. of
Appellant at 49. While some Georgia authority might support Pruitt’s point that cross-examining
a witness can show a bona fide dispute, see, e.g., Horton v. Dennis, 750 S.E.2d 493, 498 (Ga. Ct.
App. 2013) (stating that “a bona fide controversy between the parties clearly existed throughout
the litigation” and basing its conclusion, in part, on the defendant’s cross-examination of the
plaintiff’s experts (emphasis added)), we aren’t swayed. It seems to us that the best reading of
Georgia law is that evidence of a bona fide dispute must pertain to conduct prior to litigation, not
conduct during the litigation. See supra at 42–43. Georgia cases indicate that the whole point of
§ 13-6-11 is to allow an innocent party to avoid litigation, meaning the relevant inquiry must be
whether there was a good reason to go to court in the first place. See, e.g., Kroger Co. v.
Walters, 735 S.E.2d 99, 105 (Ga. Ct. App. 2012) (“Where [no bona fide controversy] exists, then
forcing a plaintiff to resort to the courts in order to collect is plainly causing him unnecessary
trouble and expense.” (alteration in original) (quotation omitted)). Further, and tellingly, other
provisions in the Georgia Code allow for the recovery of attorney’s fees if the opposing party
engages in certain specified conduct during litigation. See Stone v. King, 396 S.E.2d 45, 46 (Ga.
Ct. App. 1990) (explaining that § 13-6-11 deals with “conduct arising from the transaction
underlying the cause of action in litigation” while § 9-15-14(a) & (b) deal with “conduct
occurring during the litigation” (alteration adopted) (quotation omitted)).
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notifying Caradigm of its breach, Pruitt said only that it had “suspended all efforts
dedicated to [the] project” and that the contract was “no longer valid.” When
Caradigm’s CEO sent Pruitt the March 16, 2015 letter stating that Pruitt didn’t
have a unilateral right to terminate the contract, Pruitt never even responded. Pruitt
likewise failed to dispute invoices sent by Caradigm over a five-month period. In
sum, Pruitt hasn’t produced any evidence of a bona fide pre-filing dispute
regarding either liability or damages, rendering any possible error in the district
court’s jury instructions harmless. Cf. Rand v. Nat’l Fin. Ins. Co., 304 F.3d 1049,
1052 (11th Cir. 2002) (holding that “there was no prejudice” stemming from the
district court’s failure to give a jury instruction on a particular defense where the
defendant “failed to produce any evidence” on “an essential element of that
defense”).20
20
Pruitt suggested at oral argument that the issue whether a claim of stubborn litigiousness under
§ 13-6-11 can be avoided by showing a genuine dispute with regard to damages (as well as
liability) could be certified to the Georgia Supreme Court. Oral Argument at 5:31. But for the
same reasons that Pruitt wasn’t prejudiced by the district court’s jury instruction, it wouldn’t be
appropriate to certify the question. Under Georgia’s certification standard, we may certify to the
Georgia Supreme Court “questions or propositions of the laws of [Georgia] which are
determinative of” the proceeding before us when “there are no clear controlling precedents in the
appellate court decisions of [Georgia].” Ga. S. Ct. R. 46 (emphasis added). Because Pruitt has
shown no evidence of a bona fide dispute with respect to liability or damages, any error in the
district court’s jury instructions didn’t prejudice Pruitt and therefore the answer to the certified
question wouldn’t be “determinative of” this issue.
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III
In conclusion, we cannot say that the district court reversibly erred in
handling the damages trial in most of the ways that Pruitt contends that it did.
Moreover, with respect to the award of contract damages and attorney’s fees, in
any instances where the district court erred or might have erred, the errors did not
cause Pruitt prejudice. Finally, however, while we conclude that Caradigm is
entitled to recover interest under the parties’ agreement, we hold that the district
court erred in awarding compound interest. Accordingly, we affirm the awards of
contract damages and attorney’s fees, as well as the determination that Caradigm is
entitled to recover contractual interest, but we vacate the compound-interest award
and remand so that the district court can calculate it in simple terms.
AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
49