Knapp Shoes, Inc. v. Sylvania Shoe Manufacturing Corp.

January 11, 1996  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

                                         

No. 95-1220

                      KNAPP SHOES, INC.

                    Plaintiff, Appellant,

                              v.

           SYLVANIA SHOE MANUFACTURING CORPORATION,

                     Defendant, Appellee.

                                         

                         ERRATA SHEET

   The opinion of this  court, issued on December 20,  1995, is
amended as follows:

   On  page   36,  line   four,   replace  "$233,626.47"   with
"$223,626.47".

   On  page   36,   line  five,   replace  "$243,911.62"   with
"$253,911.62".

   On  page 36, line five, add to  the end of the paragraph the
following sentence:   "In addition, the  magistrate judge's order
terminating the  injunction against  Sylvania, as entered  on May
31, 1991 and amended on June 10, 1991, is vacated; the magistrate
judge  is free  to reduce the  amount embargoed to  the net award
plus anticipated costs and interest."


                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                            UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                         

No. 95-1220

                      KNAPP SHOES, INC.

                    Plaintiff, Appellant,

                              v.

           SYLVANIA SHOE MANUFACTURING CORPORATION,

                     Defendant, Appellee.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

              FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

       [Hon. Lawrence P. Cohen, U.S. Magistrate Judge]
                                                                 

                                         

                            Before

                    Cyr, Boudin and Lynch,

                       Circuit Judges.
                                                 

                                         

Bernard  J. Bonn III with  whom Timothy C. Blank,  Kara W. Swanson
                                                                              
and Dechert Price & Rhoads were on briefs for appellant.
                                  
Joseph B.  Green with  whom Steven L.  Katz and Kotin,  Crabtree &
                                                                              
Strong were on brief for appellee.
              

                                         

                      December 20, 1995
                                         


     BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.  Over the  course of three years,
                                      

beginning   in  early  1987,   Knapp  Shoes,  Inc.  ("Knapp")

purchased nearly  300,000 pairs  of shoes from  Sylvania Shoe

Manufacturing Corp. ("Sylvania").   The relationship  between

the two  companies underwent  strains during its  final year,

and broke off early in 1990.   Knapp filed suit in April 1990

claiming  that Sylvania  had  manufactured  defective  shoes;

Sylvania counterclaimed for unpaid bills.  In March 1995, the

magistrate judge  awarded net damages of less than $65,000 in

favor  of Sylvania.    Knapp appeals.    We affirm  in  part,

reverse in part,  and remand for the entry of  a new judgment

as specified in this opinion.

                   I.  THE UNDERLYING FACTS
                               I.  THE UNDERLYING FACTS

     Knapp,  a  Massachusetts  corporation, manufactures  and

distributes  work   shoes.    In  addition   to  selling  and

distributing shoes that it manufactures, Knapp also sells and

distributes shoes manufactured by other shoe companies  under

the Knapp  logo.   Sylvania, a Pennsylvania  corporation, was

one such supplier to Knapp.

     In late  1986, Jack  Esser, then Knapp's  vice president

for merchandising and manufacturing,  told Knapp personnel to

contact  Sylvania to  arrange  for the  manufacture of  shoes

Knapp  was selling  to  the U.S.  Postal  Service.   Sylvania

delivered over  10,000 pairs  of two styles  of shoes--models

1249 and 1250--by  mid-February 1987.  By all accounts, there

                             -2-
                                         -2-


were few problems with  these shoes, nor were  there problems

with over  5,000 pairs  of 1249s delivered  between September

1987 and May 1988.

     Thus  encouraged,  Sylvania  and  Knapp  expanded  their

collaboration, and  by early  1988 Sylvania  had made  or was

making over two dozen models of shoes for Knapp.  These later

models all differed in construction from the 1249s and 1250s.

While  the latter in each  case consisted of  a leather upper

cemented  to  a  polyurethane   sole,  the  new  models  were

constructed of three parts:  a rubber outsole, an ethyl vinyl

acetate  (EVA) midsole, and  a leather upper.   Among Knapp's

various  problems  with  Sylvania  shoes,  the  most  serious

complaint was  that the  leather  upper and  the EVA  midsole

tended to fall apart.  

     The bulk of Knapp's  purchases were in three categories.

The  first, style  1251, accounted  for nearly  25,000 pairs.

These  shoes were  athletic-style postal  shoes.   The second

category  was  the  2600  series, which  accounted  for  over

140,000 pairs.   These shoes were  steel-toed shoes, intended

for  use  in  industrial   settings  where  OSHA  regulations

required  protective footwear.   The  final category  was the

2800 and 2900 series of non-steel-toe shoes, of which perhaps

70,000 pairs were  sold.   A number of  models that  Sylvania

produced for Knapp are not implicated in this litigation.

     Quality control problems with shoes in these three lines

                             -3-
                                         -3-


appeared  almost immediately  and  continued  throughout  the

history  of the  two companies'  relationship.   In mid-1987,

Knapp  found  that  the  toe   bumpers  of  style  2600  were

improperly  bonded to the shoe and could be peeled off; these

shoes  were  returned to  Sylvania  for  repair before  being

shipped to  Knapp's customers.  A  further problem--this time

with sole adhesion--appeared soon afterwards, affecting white

shoes in the 2600 and 2800 lines.  Sylvania, on the advice of

its cement company, had  in late 1987 added white  pigment to

the cement for  cosmetic reasons, and  this seemed to  affect

the bond.  This difficulty led  to the recall of thousands of

shoes in early 1988.

     By summer 1988, the  sole separation problems had spread

to  black shoes.    In a  letter sent  by  John Sprague,  the

individual at Knapp charged  with quality control and product

development, to  Colin Elliot, a vice  president at Sylvania,

Sprague wrote that the problems reported with the black shoes

"scare[s]  the hell  out  of us"  and  reported also  that  a

"[r]ash   of  telephone   calls"  had   complained   of  sole

separations  on style  1251.   Following these  complaints, a

number  of  shoes were  sent  to  the Footwear  Institute  of

America for  pull testing.1  These tests  indicated that some

                    
                                

     1Pull  tests,   standard  in  the  industry,  allow  for
measurement  of  the  strength  of  shoe  construction.    In
addition  to measuring  the  pounds of  pressure that  can be
applied to a particular area of the shoe before it will fail,
the tests indicate whether the failure was caused by material

                             -4-
                                         -4-


sole adhesion problems were caused by improper manufacture.

     Esser later testified that he concluded at the time that

the  problems  were  minimal  and  he  authorized   continued

purchases  from Sylvania.   However,  both Sprague  and Esser

remained  in almost daily contact with Elliot in an effort to

correct the defects.   In  addition, Knapp began  to place  a

legend on the bottom  of some of its purchase  orders, "ORDER

PENDING CORRECTION OF SOLE SEPARATION PROBLEM."  

     Throughout  this  period,  the evidence  indicates  that

Sylvania and Knapp  worked together to  attempt to solve  the

problems  that  were affecting  the  shoes.   Various  design

changes  were suggested  by Knapp,  and  Sylvania implemented

many of them.  The suggestions included adding toe bumpers to

models  that  lacked  them and  substituting  a  polyurethane

midsole  for the EVA midsole in certain models.  In addition,

Sylvania changed cement companies in mid-1988.  

     In 1989,  the relations between the  two companies began

to  deteriorate.    Sylvania  blames  this  deterioration  on

Knapp's then-parlous  financial state.   Knapp established  a

cash  committee in February 1989  (of which John  Esser was a

member); Richard  Nedder, Knapp's president, was  replaced by

Joel Murray in April.  Knapp  fell behind on its account with

Sylvania,  prompting Sylvania president  Robert Pearlstein to

                    
                                

failure--a  tearing of the upper or of the sole--or by a bond
failure.  

                             -5-
                                         -5-


send letters of complaint in the summer of 1989.

     Knapp  insists  that  defects  in  Sylvania  shoes  were

jeopardizing  some  of its  most  important  accounts and  it

offered evidence  that failures in models 2810  and 2930 were

of particular concern.  In the summer of 1989 Knapp attempted

to  return 1000 pairs of  2810's that were  produced with the

EVA  midsole; Sylvania  refused to  accept the  returns.   At

trial, Sylvania offered evidence, credited  by the magistrate

judge,  that many  of  these 2810  and  2930 shoes  were  not

manufactured by Sylvania, but  were instead imported by Knapp

from  Taiwan.   There was  also  evidence that  sole adhesion

problems  affected some  models that  were never  produced by

Sylvania.

      In an effort to work out a payment schedule, Pearlstein

met with  Murray and others at Knapp  twice in the summer and

fall of  1989.   At the latter  meeting on October  17, Knapp

sought to  demonstrate that there were  quality problems with

Sylvania  shoes  by  twisting  the  soles  and  uppers  apart

manually.  This was done, but the ease, and the significance,

of the demonstration  were disputed.  At that  meeting, Knapp

agreed  to pay $40,000 for  every $35,000 of  product sent by

Sylvania, the  extra $5,000 being part of  Knapp's attempt to

repay earlier amounts owned to Sylvania.

     Records of both companies show that shipments  continued

in October and  November 1989.   Payments were  also made  by

                             -6-
                                         -6-


Knapp against its outstanding balance in January 1990.  O   n

December 1,  1989, Dick  Sebastiao joined Knapp  as executive

vice president  with the  understanding that he  would become

president in February 1990.  By the end of 1989,  Sprague had

been fired and  Esser, who had been on the board of directors

of the company, also had left.  

     A  final shipment  of  Sylvania shoes  was delivered  in

February  1990, after Knapp  made an advance  payment.  James

Crabtree,  a Knapp  employee, testified  that when  the shoes

were  inspected, he was able to pull them apart with his bare

hands;   he  alerted  Sebastiao,  who  called  Pearlstein  at

Sylvania.   Pearlstein  asked for  a sample  to inspect,  and

disputed  Crabtree's findings.   The  magistrate judge  later

found   Crabtree's   testimony   incredible    and   credited

Pearlstein's assertion  that the  shoes in the  February 1990

shipment were not defective, although two Sylvania employees-

-Elliot   and   John  Cartwright   (Sylvania's  manufacturing

supervisor)--admitted that  they had  been  able manually  to

separate the soles on some of the shoes.  

     Crabtree further  testified that  he then began  to test

Knapp's existing  inventory of Sylvania shoes  and found that

it  was "95%  defective."    Again,  this testimony  was  not

credited  by  the magistrate  judge.    Knapp also  performed

various  tests on the shoes from the February shipment and on

shoes  in  inventory  after  the  start  of  litigation;  its

                             -7-
                                         -7-


evidence  at trial  was that  these tests  consistently found

problems  with the bonding of  the shoes.   This evidence was

also not credited by the magistrate judge. 

                             -8-
                                         -8-


                    II.  PRIOR PROCEEDINGS
                                II.  PRIOR PROCEEDINGS

     On  April 10,  1990, Knapp  filed this  diversity action

against  Sylvania  under  Massachusetts  law  for  breach  of

contract (count  1), breach  of express warranty  and implied

warranties of  merchantability and  fitness for a  particular

purpose  (counts 2-4), breach of  the duty of  good faith and

fair dealing (count 5), fraud and negligent misrepresentation

(counts 6  and 7),  and violation  of Mass.  Gen. L. ch.  93A

(count  8).2  Sylvania  also counterclaimed, seeking $277,000

for unpaid  bills, plus multiple damages  and attorney's fees

under Chapter 93A.  

     Both parties  consented to  proceed before a  magistrate

judge without a jury, and the magistrate judge bifurcated the

trial into a liability  phase and a damages phase.   Evidence

in the  liability phase was  completed on  January 31,  1991,

after  nine days of testimony.  That same day, the magistrate

judge entered  a four-page memorandum and  order that devoted

one paragraph each to  five of Knapp's eight counts,  without

discussing Sylvania's counterclaims.  

     In  this  decision,  the  magistrate  judge  ruled  that

Sylvania had  breached its  warranties only insofar  as Knapp

had shown, or  could show,  that shoes delivered  to it  were

                    
                                

     2Chapter  93A outlaws  "[u]nfair methods  of competition
and unfair or deceptive  acts or practices in the  conduct of
any  trade  or  commerce,"  and permits  awards  of  multiple
damages and attorneys' fees.

                             -9-
                                         -9-


defective.  The  magistrate judge also  found that Knapp  had

failed  to  prove  fraud,  negligent  misrepresentation  or--

"except to the extent that plaintiff has shown, or can show,"

a refusal  by Sylvania  to credit returned  defective shoes--

breach of  the duty of good  faith and fair dealing.   As for

Knapp's chapter  93A claim,  the decision said  that Sylvania

had  not been shown to  have engaged in unscrupulous conduct;

it noted,  but  did not  decide,  the question  whether  some

payments  might still be due Knapp under chapter 93A based on

a regulation of the state's attorney general.

     In  May 1991, prior to  the damages phase  of the trial,

Knapp learned  that Sylvania  was going  out of  business and

liquidating its assets.  Fearful that Sylvania would soon  be

judgment-proof, Knapp obtained a temporary  restraining order

precluding Sylvania from dissipating  assets in the amount of

$3,775,657.22--the amount  of  damages that  Knapp  hoped  to

prove in the damage phase of the trial.  The magistrate judge

modified  this order on June  10, 1991, converting  it into a

preliminary injunction  and amending it to  allow Sylvania to

make limited payments to its creditors and lawyers.

     The damages phase of the trial took place over five days

in June  1991; at  Sylvania's  behest, an  additional day  of

evidence was heard  on November 25, 1991.   Proposed findings

of fact and conclusions of  law were filed by the  parties in

March 1992.  Then, in March 1993, the magistrate judge issued

                             -10-
                                         -10-


an  order  proposing  to  certify certain  questions  to  the

Massachusetts Supreme  Judicial  Court.   Both sides  opposed

certification,  but on  April 8,  1993, the  magistrate judge

certified  two  questions,  both  relating  to  the  possible

application of Chapter 93A to  "a simple breach of warranty."

     The  magistrate judge  prefaced the  certified questions

with  a ten-page  statement.   In it,  he first  repeated the

rulings on the five counts contained in the January 31, 1991,

order.    Then, he  determined for  the  first time  that the

parties  had   agreed   by  express   negotiations,   express

understandings  and express  course of  dealings that  in the

event of defects, "Knapp's remedy, and sole remedy, would  be
                                                       

the  replacement of [or credit  for] those shoes  shown to be

defective  and  returned--nothing  more,  and  nothing  less"

(footnote  omitted;   brackets   in  the   original).     The

certification also said, in a footnote, that  less than three

percent  of  the  Sylvania  shoes  delivered  to  Knapp  were

defective.

     On Sylvania's motion, the magistrate judge dissolved the

preliminary injunction on May  5, 1993, concluding that Knapp

now  had little hope of  a substantial recovery.   On Knapp's

appeal,  this  court  stayed   and  then  vacated  the  order

dissolving the preliminary injunction.   Knapp Shoes, Inc. v.
                                                                      

Sylvania  Shoe Manufacturing  Corp., 15  F.3d 1222  (1st Cir.
                                               

                             -11-
                                         -11-


1994).    We held  that Sylvania  had waived  the affirmative

defense of limitation of remedies by failing to raise it in a

timely fashion.   Since the  issue of limitation  of remedies

had never been litigated by the parties, the waiver could not

be avoided by amending the pleadings to conform to the proof.

Cf. Fed. R.  Civ. P. 15(b).   Accordingly, we said that  "the
               

limitation  of remedies defense is out of the case and cannot

support the order vacating the injunction."  Id. at 1227. 
                                                            

     We  also rejected  Sylvania's alternative  argument that

the termination of the  injunction could be supported  by the

magistrate  judge's footnote  finding, in  the certification,

that the percentage of  defects was very small.   Our opinion

pointed  out  that the  magistrate  judge had  not  set forth

findings or  analysis to  support this  conclusion as  to the

quantity  of defects, so we  were "unable to  make a reasoned

judgment  whether, on  this  critical issue  of defects,  the

magistrate   judge's  finding   was   or  was   not  `clearly

erroneous'" under Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a).  Id. at 1228-29.
                                                         

     On October 13, 1994, the Supreme Judicial Court answered

the  certified  questions  that  had been  submitted  by  the

magistrate  judge.    Knapp  Shoes,  Inc.  v.  Sylvania  Shoe
                                                                         

Manufacturing Corp., 640 N.E.2d 1101 (Mass. 1994).  The Court
                               

held that 940 Code Mass. Regs.   3.08, which provides in part

that "[i]t shall be  an unfair and deceptive act  or practice

to fail  to perform  or fulfill  any promises or  obligations

                             -12-
                                         -12-


arising  under  a warranty,"  was not  meant "to  encompass a

contract dispute between businessmen based on a breach of the

implied warranty of merchantability."  Id. at 1105.
                                                      

     Thus informed,  the magistrate  judge  issued his  final

decision on  March 1, 1995.   With respect to counts  3 and 4

(breach  of warranties  of merchantability  and fitness),  he

again  held that Sylvania had  breached its warranties to the

extent  that  particular shoes  were  defective  for whatever

reason.   On count  1 (breach  of  contract), the  magistrate

judge  said  again that  there  was no  violation  beyond the

breaches of  warranty covered  by counts  3 and  4.   He also

reaffirmed that Knapp  had failed to establish  its claims in

count 2 (breach of express warranties), count 5 (duty of good

faith  and fair dealing), count 6 (common law fraud), count 7

(common law negligent  misrepresentation) and count 8  (Mass.

Gen. L. ch. 93A violation).  

     On Sylvania's counterclaims, the magistrate  judge found

that  Knapp was  liable for  the outstanding balance  due for

shoes that Sylvania had  delivered to Knapp.   The magistrate

judge found  that Sylvania  was not entitled  to recover  the

contract price  of additional  shoes it had  manufactured for

Knapp but not yet delivered; the reason was that Sylvania had

failed  to make a reasonable effort  to resell the shoes.  He

also rejected Sylvania's own chapter 93A claim against Knapp.

Sylvania does not challenge these rulings on appeal.

                             -13-
                                         -13-


     In  computing  damages, the  magistrate judge  held that

Knapp should receive credit only for defective shoes still in

its  inventory--which he  determined to  be between  3 and  4

percent of the  total--and for specified  incidental damages.

He ruled that  Knapp had no right to revoke acceptance of any

non-defective  goods in  inventory, nor  to reject  the final

shipment of shoes sent  in February 1990, nor to  recover for

lost  profits.  In the final tally, Knapp was awarded damages

of   $160,062.74,  and  Sylvania   was  awarded   damages  of

$223,626.47.    Finally,   the  preliminary  injunction   was

dissolved.   We  stayed the  judgment pending  disposition of

this appeal.

         III.  LAW OF THE CASE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
                     III.  LAW OF THE CASE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

     Our  review of  the facts  found by  the trial  judge is

normally deferential; findings are not to be set aside unless

clearly  erroneous, with  "due  regard .  .  . given  to  the

opportunity of the trial court to judge of the credibility of

the  witnesses."   Fed.  R. Civ.  P.  52(a); see  Williams v.
                                                                      

Poulos, 11 F.3d 271,  278 (1st Cir. 1993).  Knapp argues that
                  

our review should  be less deferential in this  case, drawing

attention to paragraph 49  of the magistrate judge's findings

of fact and its accompanying footnote.

          [Paragraph 49]   With respect to  all lines of
     shoes  which Knapp  requested  be  manufactured  by
     Sylvania,  one  finding  is   unmistakenably  [sic]
     clear:   By  their express  negotiations, by  their
     express   understandings,  by   their  demonstrated
     conduct, and by  their express course of  dealings,

                             -14-
                                         -14-


     Sylvania  promised  Knapp that,  in the  event that
     shoes   were   defectively  manufactured,   Knapp's
     remedy,  and sole remedy,  would be the replacement
                                  
     of  [or  credit  for]   those  shoes  shown  to  be
     defective and returned--nothing  more, and  nothing
     less.

          [Footnote]    This  finding  is not  made  and
     reported to  suggest that  Knapp waived its  rights
     under  Sections  2-601,  2-608,  and  2-609 of  the
     Uniform Commercial Code (M.G.L., ch. 106,    2-601,
     2-608  and 2-609).  Although it was and is clear to
     this court--then  and now--that  that was  the sole
     understanding of the  parties in terms  of remedies
     and relief, and that it was clear (then and now) to
     all  parties that  the  defense  of  waiver  loomed
     throughout, and  that plaintiff could  not--then or
     now--establish  any  legal   prejudice  (that   is,
                                           
     plaintiff  could not--then or now--make any showing
     that the  case would have been  tried differently),
     our  Court  of  Appeals,   in  the  context  of  an
     interlocutory appeal relating to the dissolution of
     an injunction, has concluded otherwise.

          Nevertheless, this finding and conclusion bear
     heavily on the credibility of the witnesses  called
     by Knapp, and other issues to be determined herein.

     Knapp argues  that this  discussion violates the  law of

the case by  contradicting our holding in Knapp that Sylvania
                                                           

had waived any such limitation of remedies  defense, that the

issue  of limitation  of remedies  had not been  litigated at

trial, and that  it was now  "out of the case."   15 F.3d  at

1227.     Knapp  further  insists  that  this  error  by  the

magistrate   judge  tainted   his  other   factual  findings,

requiring  us  to   subject  these  findings  to   heightened

scrutiny.  Paragraph 49  has certainly complicated matters on

this  appeal,  but  we   conclude  that  Knapp  has  somewhat

exaggerated its import and consequences.

                             -15-
                                         -15-


     The law of the case doctrine has more than one dimension

and  certain  complexities, but  as  applied  to the  problem

before us, the doctrine provides that when a court of appeals

makes a ruling of law, whether on appeal of a  final judgment

or in an interlocutory appeal, that ruling becomes the law of

the case  in any subsequent  proceedings in the  trial court.

Elias v. Ford Motor Co., 734 F.2d 463 (1st Cir.  1984).  Such
                                   

a ruling is "[a] mandate [that] is  completely controlling as

to  all matters before the appellate court and disposed of by

its decree."  Id. at 465.    
                             

     We agree with Sylvania that the magistrate judge did not

contradict  our legal  ruling in  Knapp that  the defense  of
                                                   

limitation  of remedies was waived  and now out  of the case.

He  did  not  rest  any  of his  own  legal  rulings  on  the

proposition that  Knapp had limited its  remedies by contract

to  credit  for  returned  shoes; indeed,  he  awarded  Knapp

damages for defective shoes still in its possession (although

he found the number of such shoes to be very small).  To that

extent,  Knapp's law-of-the-case  claim  is  something  of  a

diversion.

     At the same time, on an intermediate proposition of fact

a direct conflict exists between our earlier opinion and  the

most recent decision of the magistrate judge.  The magistrate

judge  repeats in the footnote to  paragraph 49, quoted above

in  text, his earlier conclusion  that Knapp and Sylvania did

                             -16-
                                         -16-


agree in fact  to limit Knapp's  remedies; and he  recognizes

that this  court on  the prior appeal  "concluded otherwise."

Our actual conclusion was slightly narrower--we said that the

parties  had not purported to litigate the issue and we could

find no evidence  of such an agreement--but  the fact remains

that  the magistrate judge has reasserted  his view that such

agreement has been proved.

     All this  might matter little if  the magistrate judge's

disagreement with us played  no role in his decision,  but he

goes  on  to  say that  "this  finding  and conclusion  bears

heavily  on the credibility of the witnesses called by Knapp,

and other issues to be determined herein."  No  resort to law

of the case doctrine is required for us to determine that his

"finding  and  conclusion"  that such  an  agreement  existed

limiting  remedies  is  clearly  erroneous.   The  very  same

defect--the  lack of  evidence  to show  such an  agreement--

identified  in   our   earlier  decision   remains,   utterly

unaltered.

     We  explained  in our  earlier opinion  why we  were not

persuaded  of such  an  agreement by  the magistrate  judge's

reliance on Esser's testimony  that a return remedy existed--

testimony  that   did  not   even  purport  to   address  the

exclusivity of the remedy--and  also why we saw no  course of

dealing by  the parties that  could prove such  a limitation.

15  F.3d at 1226-27.  No new  evidence was taken on remand to

                             -17-
                                         -17-


prove  this  limitation;  no  additional support  for  it  is

mustered  by the  magistrate  judge out  of the  pre-existing

record.  

     About the best we can do in this disturbing situation is

to  defer to  the usual  extent as  to those findings  of the

magistrate judge that we are confident have not been infected

by his  belief in  the supposed agreement  limiting remedies;

and, on all other findings, to consider them in the knowledge

that the magistrate judge has credited or discredited certain

witnesses  based (at least in part) on a premise that we have

already  held to be mistaken.   Sorting out  findings in this

way,  and  deciding  how   to  treat  infected  findings,  is

something of a task but better than an outright remand on all

issues to a new judge.

                      IV.  THE MERITS  
                                  IV.  THE MERITS

     Our analysis of  the merits is  divided in three  parts.

Knapp  raises  some  rather  half-hearted  objections  to the

magistrate judge's rulings that reject most of its counts; we

find  that  these rulings  are  sustainable  on this  record.

Knapp's  next  objections  concern  the   magistrate  judge's

rulings on remedies; here we find that the magistrate judge's

analysis of the  remedies available to  Knapp was correct  on

one issue (Knapp's purported  revocation of acceptance of all

shipments) but  flawed on  another (Knapp's rejection  of the

first  February  1990  shipment).    Finally,  we  find  that

                             -18-
                                         -18-


elements of the magistrate judge's  determinations on damages

were clearly erroneous but that the necessary corrections can

be made on the existing record.

                        A.  Liability
                                                 

     Knapp's complaint  alleged eight causes of  action.  The

magistrate  judge ruled that Knapp had  failed to persuade on

all except for counts 3 and 4, breaches of implied warranties

of merchantability and fitness; these warranties were held to

be  breached  only  with respect  to  those  shoes  that were

actually defective.   Sylvania  does not appeal  that limited

finding   of  liability;  Knapp  appeals  from  the  decision

rejecting  its other  counts, but  its arguments  are without

merit.

     Breach  of Contract.  With respect to count 1, breach of
                                    

contract,  Knapp  objects   that  the  magistrate  judge   in

rejecting this count relied upon his footnote 49 finding that

the  parties had previously  agreed to  limit remedies.   But

Knapp's own  count 1  alleged only  that  Sylvania failed  to

deliver shoes of promised  quality; and it has not  shown how

this claim  exceeds the  breach of warranty  claims that  the

magistrate  judge allowed under counts 3 and 4.  We therefore

affirm the magistrate judge's disposition of count 1.

     Breach of Express Warranty.   On count 2, the  breach of
                                           

express warranty,  Knapp argues that  Sylvania warranted that

it  would produce a defect-free shoe and that the high defect

                             -19-
                                         -19-


rate  caused  each  entire  shipment  to   be  in  breach  of

Sylvania's  express warranty.   Knapp  points to  two letters

sent  to  Knapp  by  Sylvania in  mid-1988,  when  sole  bond

problems  were  affecting shoes  in the  2600  line.   In the

first, Elliot  wrote, "We know the  industrial consumer wants

this product  and it is  up to us  to give it  to him  or her

without  defect."  In the second, Elliot wrote "As always, we

stand  behind  our  product  and fully  warrant  the  product

against manufacturing defect." 

     If Knapp  means to  suggest that Sylvania  had warranted

that each and every shoe in a given shipment would be free of

defects  and that a shipment  could be rejected  based on any

such  defect, that  suggestion is not  reasonable.   At trial

witnesses for both  parties agreed  that no one  in the  shoe

industry expects that any shipment of shoes will  be entirely

free of defects.  Sylvania's quoted statements can at most be

read to mean that it was capable  of producing shoes that met

industry standards as to the percentage of defects.

     Of  course, to  the  extent that  Sylvania breached  its

various commitments, it may  as remedial measures be liable--

under certain  circumstances--to rejection  of more  than the

particular shoes  shown to be defective  and to consequential

damages  that  exceed  the  price  paid  for  the  particular

defective shoes.   See IV(B) and  (C), below.  But  so far as
                                  

Knapp's claim depends on the notion that Sylvania promised no

                             -20-
                                         -20-


defects at all, we think no such warranty was made.  

     Breach of  Duty of Good Faith and Fair Dealing.  Count 5
                                                               

alleged that  Sylvania breached  its duty  of good  faith and

fair dealing.3   In  his  January 31,  1991, memorandum,  the

magistrate judge  found that  Knapp had  failed to  carry its

burden on this claim, ruling that "the defendant acted in the

utmost  good faith  in an  attempt to  correct a  problem not

reasonably   foreseen  by   any   of  the   parties  to   the

relationship."   Knapp  insists that  Sylvania's  failure  to

correct its manufacturing  processes, despite its  assurances

to Knapp  that  the  quality  of  its  shoes  would  improve,

breached its duty.  

     Whether conduct violates the duty of good faith and fair

dealing is necessarily a  fact-specific inquiry, see E. Allan
                                                                

Farnsworth,  Contracts      7.17  (2d  ed.   1990),  and  the
                                  

magistrate judge's  finding  here is  not clearly  erroneous.

There  was  ample  untainted  record  evidence  that Sylvania

strove to improve the  quality of the shoes it  delivered; it

changed its cement suppliers  and implemented various  design

changes  suggested  by Knapp.    There  is  no evidence  that

Sylvania's failure  to improve its manufacturing  process was

                    
                                

     3In Massachusetts, "[e]very  contract implies good faith
and fair dealing between the parties to it."  Warner Ins. Co.
                                                                         
v. Commissioner of Ins., 548 N.E.2d 188, 193 n.9 (Mass. 1990)
                                   
(quoting  Kerrigan  v. Boston,  278  N.E.2d  387, 393  (Mass.
                                         
1972).   Similarly,  Mass. Gen.  L. ch.  106 ("UCC")    1-203
imposes an "obligation of good faith."

                             -21-
                                         -21-


motivated by bad  faith rather  than by a  simple failure  to

root out and remedy all of the problems.

     Fraud and  Negligent Misrepresentation.  Counts  6 and 7
                                                       

charged  fraudulent  and negligent  misrepresentation, claims

that  in Massachusetts  require a  false representation  of a

material fact,  knowledge of  falsity or carelessness  on the

part  of  the  defendant,  and  reasonable  reliance  by  the

plaintiff.4

     The magistrate judge found, in his memorandum of January

31,   1991,  that  Knapp's  misrepresentation  claims  failed

because Sylvania had done  what it said it would  do--use its

best  efforts to produce shoes  free of defects.   On appeal,

Knapp  insists  that  Sylvania  had  repeatedly  and  falsely

assured Knapp  that it  would correct  any problems  with the

shoes,   and   that   Knapp   reasonably  relied   on   these

representations in continuing its purchases.

     We  need  not  decide  whether such  reliance  would  be

reasonable,  but cf.  IV(C) below,  because we agree  that no
                                

false representation has been  shown.  The evidence  at trial

indicated that Knapp and Sylvania remained in regular contact

regarding  proposed  design  and manufacturing  changes,  and

Sylvania  never  misrepresented the  changes  it  proposed to

carry out.  In this context, Sylvania's conclusory statements

                    
                                

     4VMark Software, Inc. v. EMC Corp., 642 N.E.2d  587, 593
                                                   
n.8  (Mass. App. Ct. 1994); Zimmerman v. Kent, 575 N.E.2d 70,
                                                         
77 (Mass. App. Ct. 1991).

                             -22-
                                         -22-


that its quality would improve--and Knapp calls our attention

to no more specific alleged misstatement--are no more than an

"expectation, estimate, opinion, or judgment."  See Powell v.
                                                                      

Rasmussen, 243 N.E.2d 167, 168 (Mass. 1969).
                     

     Chapter  93A.   On  count 8--Knapp's  ch. 93A  claim--we
                             

again  affirm the magistrate judge.  For Knapp to prevail, it

must  prove that  Sylvania's conduct  included an  "unfair or

deceptive act,"  a phrase that the  Massachusetts courts read

as  requiring  a  showing  of  "rascality;"  the  showing  is

especially  difficult  where the  case  involves arm's-length

transactions   between   sophisticated   business   entities.

Anthony's Pier Four, Inc. v. HBC Assocs., 583 N.E.2d 806, 821
                                                    

(Mass. 1991).

     The crux of Knapp's argument  is that Sylvania was aware

that there  were problems with its  manufacturing process and

failed to make  the needed  changes.  But  as the  magistrate

judge  held, there was  no evidence at  trial that Sylvania's

failure to improve the quality of its shoes was deliberate or

willful; on the contrary, it made repeated efforts on its own

and in consultation with Knapp to correct perceived problems.

Knapp's claim  for multiple  damages and attorney's  fees was

therefore properly denied.

            B.  Revocation and Rejection Remedies 
                                                             

     Even if liability is based only on counts 3 and 4, Knapp

argues on appeal that the magistrate judge nevertheless erred

                             -23-
                                         -23-


in determining the remedies available to it.  It says that he

improperly  denied  to  Knapp  remedies  of   "revocation  of

acceptance"  (with  respect  to  all  prior  shipments)   and

"rejection" (with  respect to the shipment  of February 1990)

and that these errors  led him into a further  error, namely,

to direct his damage assessment only to those  shoes actually

shown to be defective.

     Revocation of Acceptance as to  All Shoes.  Knapp  first
                                                          

argues  that  it  is entitled  to  revoke  acceptance  of all

inventory  purchased  from Sylvania--including  non-defective

shoes--because the rate of defects was  so high as to make it

impossible  for Knapp to sell shoes from that inventory.  The

magistrate judge rejected this remedy because he found a very

low rate of defects.  Although this finding is not adequately

supported, see IV(C) below, we agree with the  result because
                          

Knapp  failed   to  make  an  effective   revocation  of  its

acceptance under UCC   2-608.

     When a buyer "accepts" goods, as defined in UCC   2-606,

the  buyer forfeits the right to "reject"  the tender.  UCC  

2-607.  However, a  buyer may be able to  "revoke acceptance"

under UCC   2-608 as follows:

     (1)  The buyer  may revoke his acceptance of  a lot
     or    commercial    unit    whose    non-conformity
     substantially impairs  its value  to him if  he has
     accepted it
          (a) on the reasonable assumption that its non-
     conformity  would  be cured  and  it  has not  been
     seasonably cured; or
          (b) without discovery  of such  non-conformity

                             -24-
                                         -24-


     if his acceptance was reasonably  induced either by
     the difficulty of discovery before acceptance or by
     the seller's assurances.
     (2)   Revocation of acceptance must  occur within a
     reasonable time after the buyer discovers or should
     have discovered  the ground  for it and  before any
     substantial  change in condition of the goods which
     is  not caused  by their  own defects.   It  is not
     effective until  the buyer  notifies the seller  of
     it.

The buyer  who revokes has  the same rights and  duties as if

the buyer had rejected the goods.  UCC   2-608.

     Knapp  argues  that  this  case  falls  squarely  within

section 2-608  (1)(b).  It  says that the  sole-bond problems

were hard to discover  because they could not be  detected by

visible  inspection  and  that  it   reasonably  relied  upon

Sylvania's assurances that it had corrected the bond problem.

 Knapp  cites  to  S &  R  Metals,  Inc.  v.  C. Itoh  &  Co.
                                                                         

(America), 859 F.2d 814 (9th Cir. 1988), as authority for the
                     

view  that  a buyer  can  revoke  acceptance  when the  prior

acceptance was made  without knowledge of the  defect and the

defect was "latent and difficult to discover."

     The difficulty with Knapp's position is that by mid-1988

it had ample knowledge  that customers were complaining about

separation, and  its own experience  confirmed that  Sylvania

was not successfully solving  the underlying problems.  Knapp

itself points  to pull-tests done  in 1988 which,  it argues,

prove that Sylvania's manufacturing  process was flawed.  Yet

not  until spring  1990--the  precise  date is  disputed--did

Knapp purport to revoke acceptance for all shoes delivered to

                             -25-
                                         -25-


it over the entire period.

     This is not a  revocation occurring within "a reasonable

time" after  the buyer  discovered the ground  for rejection,

and the contrast between the present facts and those of S & R
                                                                         

Metals underscores the point.  In that case, the buyer had no
                  

reason to  doubt the quality  of the  steel until  complaints

were received; advance testing  would have been expensive and

destroyed the valuable product  tested; and the revocation of

acceptance  was made  within nine  days after the  defect had
                                                   

been discovered  and confirmed.   S & R  Metals, 859 F.2d  at
                                                           

817.    Nothing  in this  decision,  or  any  other cited  by

Knapp,5  suggests that  a buyer  can accept  deliveries of  a

vast number of  items over a period of a year  and a half and

then suddenly revoke the  acceptance of all of them  based on

defects  whose presence  was  known or  suspected during  the

entire period.

     Rejection  of  the  February  1990  Shipment.    A  much
                                                             

narrower and  stronger claim  by Knapp  is  that it  properly

rejected the  single shipment  of shoes received  in February

1990.   Section 2-601  of the UCC  provides that  if goods or

                    
                                

     5In Fortin  v.  Ox Bow  Marina,  Inc., 557  N.E.2d  1157
                                                      
(Mass. 1977),  also cited  by  Knapp, the  court allowed  the
buyer to  revoke acceptance of  a boat delivered  four months
earlier when the seller had provided repeated assurances that
it would cure the identified  defects in the boat.  The  case
involved a different problem--a  promise to repair a specific
item  already  delivered--and  is  governed  by  a  different
provision (section 2-608(1)(a)).

                             -26-
                                         -26-


tender fail to "conform" to the  parties' contract, the buyer

may  reject the whole  delivery;6 but this  rejection must be

within  a  reasonable time,  and  the  buyer must  seasonably

notify the seller  of the rejection.   UCC    2-602(1).   The

magistrate judge  found that Knapp  failed to prove  that the

February shipment  was nonconforming, and further  found that

Knapp's rejection was untimely.

     Knapp  insists  that  the  shipment   was  nonconforming

because  all of  the  shoes in  the  shipment were  defective

inasmuch as they could  be pulled apart manually.   Crabtree,

Knapp's key  witness on  this issue, so  testified at  trial.

The  magistrate  judge made  clear  that  he did  not  accept

Crabtree's testimony,  but this appraisal may  well have been

affected  by  the  magistrate  judge's  mistaken  finding  on

limitation of remedies:  Crabtree also testified to  the fact

that  the  procedure  of   return  of  customer  defects  was

established  only  in  mid-1988  and that  before  that  time

customer returns  were discarded, a fact  that the magistrate

judge found  surprising in  view of the  "clear understanding

between the parties."

     Knapp did  carry out  a prompt  inspection of  the shoes

                    
                                

     6To  permit  rejection   of  the  entire  shipment   for
nonconformity, Knapp  had to  show not  just that  there were
defective  shoes  but that  the defect  rate was  higher than
agreed upon or, lacking specific agreement, than the standard
in the industry.   See  Agoos Kid. Co.  v. Blumenthal  Import
                                                                         
Corp., 184 N.E. 279, 281 (Mass. 1932).
                 

                             -27-
                                         -27-


that  arrived  in  the  February  1990  shipment,  complained

immediately  to Pearlstein  that the  shoes were  100 percent

defective, and sent him a case  for his own inspection.  When

the formal "rejection"  occurred is disputed--the  magistrate

judge  found that  it did  not occur  until May--but  Knapp's

actions  were   certainly  consistent   with  its   claim  of

substantial defects and  represented steps toward  rejection.

It immediately placed the seller  on notice that the  defects

were pervasive and began to negotiate the seller's response.

     The magistrate judge chose to credit fully the testimony

of Pearlstein,  Sylvania's president,  to the effect  that no

shoes from the sample case sent by Knapp to Sylvania from the

February  shipment separated.    But quite  apart from  other

Knapp  witnesses  who  supported  Crabtree,   other  Sylvania
                                                                         

employees--Elliott and Cartwright--both  agreed that at least

some of the  shoes could be  pulled apart by  hand.  Thus  we

find  it hard to  accept the magistrate  judge's finding that

"plaintiff has  failed to establish by a preponderance of the

evidence  that any of the  shoes--much less the  whole of the

lot--failed to conform."7

     This court finds  clear error only where,  "on the whole

                    
                                

     7The  magistrate  judge suggested  that the  "hand" pull
test is not standard  in the industry and that  evidence that
shoes could be pulled apart by hand did not necessarily prove
them defective.   Common sense, buttressed  by ample evidence
at  trial, confirms that an industrial work shoe is defective
where it can readily be pulled apart by hand.

                             -28-
                                         -28-


of  the record,  we form  a strong  unyielding belief  that a

mistake  has been made."   Cumpiano v.  Banco Santander P.R.,
                                                                        

902  F.2d 148, 152 (1st  Cir. 1990) (citations  omitted).  In

this  instance, we  conclude  that the  magistrate judge  was

clearly in error  in finding that the  February 1990 shipment

was  free of defects and conformed to industry standard.  The

question whether Knapp gave  prompt notice is more difficult,

but we  need  not resolve  the  issue because  whether  Knapp

rightfully  rejected   the  nonconforming  shipment   has  no

practical  impact  on the  damages to  which it  is entitled.

With the  magistrate judge's  finding on defects  set to  one

side, Knapp's  ordinary damages  as to the  February shipment

produce essentially the same amount as it would receive under

the "rejection" remedy.  See IV(C) below.
                                        

                         C.  Damages
                                                

     Knapp's damage  claims  were based  upon its  allegation

that Sylvania shoes suffered from a very  substantial rate of

defects.   In his  final damages calculation,  the magistrate

judge found that the  rate of defects in the  inventory shoes

involved  in  this litigation  was  less  than four  percent.

Knapp argues  on appeal  that the magistrate  judge's defect-

rate  finding was  clearly  erroneous, and  insists that  the

evidence established a defect rate of at least 40 percent for

the shoes remaining in inventory at Knapp.  We think that the

magistrate judge's  finding is clearly erroneous  and that on

                             -29-
                                         -29-


this record the  40 percent  figure is  the only  alternative

choice.

     Knapp's allegations  of substantial defect  rates in the

shoes remaining  in  inventory  were  supported  by  detailed

testimony by  Crabtree; by  corroborating testimony of  other

Knapp personnel; by evidence of substantial customer returns,

dissatisfaction  and cancelled  relationships  to  which  the

customers  testified;  by   testimony  that  the  number   of

defective  shoes  held  by Knapp  plus  the  number  of prior

returns  acknowledged  by  Sylvania  was  nearly  twice   the

magistrate's  3-to-4 percent  finding; by evidence  that both

Knapp and  customers threw  away additional defective  shoes;

and,  finally,  by  a  fairly detailed  sampling  study  that

appearedto establish a defect rate of at least 41.7 percent.8

     In adopting  the 3-to-4 percent defect  rate figure, the

magistrate judge accepted the  testimony of Esser and Sprague

(both  disaffected former  Knapp  employees) and  of Sylvania

personnel, to the effect  that there was never a  substantial

problem with Sylvania  shoes.  He  disregarded Crabtree as  a

liar; and he dismissed  customer testimony as not necessarily

                    
                                

     8A  biostatistician analyzed  the results  of pull-tests
performed  on  randomly selected  pairs  of  unused shoes  in
inventory.   Using a 20-pound  figure for the  pull-tests, 60
percent  of the shoes failed.   Given the  sample size tested
and the number  of shoes in  inventory, the expert  concluded
that  "we  have a  95 percent  level  of confidence  that the
actual proportion of defective  pairs in the inventory .  . .
is at least 41.7 percent."

                             -30-
                                         -30-


relating to  Sylvania shoes but rather  to shoes manufactured

in Taiwan.   He found the pull tests  inconclusive, insisting

that Knapp  had failed to  present evidence that  a pull-test

failure  at under 20 pounds showed that a shoe was defective.

He refused  to believe  Knapp's accounting  of the  number of

defective shoes in inventory.

     Under  the  Cumpiano  standard,  we  reject  as  clearly
                                     

erroneous the magistrate judge's assessment of the percentage

of  defects in the Sylvania shoes.  We have already explained

why his  related appraisal of testimony  regarding quality of

the February  1990 shipment  is unpersuasive, see  IV(B), and
                                                             

this is equally so  on the broader question of  the remaining

inventory.   Knapp's claims  of  defects came  not only  from

Knapp  but from  customers disinterested  in the  litigation,

from the  presence in  inventory of defective  shoes actually

returned  to  Knapp, and  from  the  pull-tests conducted  by

independent  experts--the last  of  which sampled  the entire

remaining Knapp inventory in the contested models.

     The notion that any  of these defective shoes  came from
                                    

foreign sources  rests on  doubtful evidence; but,  given the

poor quality  of the  February 1990 shipment  admittedly from

Sylvania, it  is obvious that foreign sources  do not explain

away  the problem.    From the  testimony  on pull-tests,  it

appears that the 20-pound figure that Knapp asked  the expert

to  employ was not only  plausible but conservative.  Knapp's

                             -31-
                                         -31-


accounting of the number of defective  shoes in its inventory

was  essentially uncontradicted.    In sum,  the evidence  is

overwhelming  that the  defect  rate was  considerably higher

than the rate adopted by the magistrate judge.

     Each side had its chance to present evidence and neither

side is entitled to introduce further evidence on this issue.

On the present  record the stark choice is between Sylvania's

claim  that defects were  no greater than  normal and Knapp's

evidence to the contrary.  The Knapp evidence was that it had

6,045 known  defective pairs in  inventory, comprising  shoes

returned by  customers, the  1,422 pairs torn-apart  from the

February 1990  shipment and  other shoes pulled  apart during

inspection  of inventory,  and--in addition--that  it had  in

inventory 21,010  new shoes  of the  models involved  in this

litigation, at  least 41.7  percent of which  the statistical

sampling showed to be defective.  

     The  evidence  as  to   raw  numbers  in  inventory  was

essentially uncontradicted  even though the  magistrate judge

declined  to  accept the  numbers.   As  for  the statistical

study,  the  20-pound  pull-test  was (as  already  noted)  a

conservative  standard based  on the  evidence; and  the 41.7

percent  figure even  more so.   Sylvania  has chosen  not to

contest its liability for defective  shoes no matter how long

in inventory.   "Where, as  here, the record  is sufficiently

developed that we can apply the law to the facts before us  .

                             -32-
                                         -32-


.  . that route is available to  us."  Lipsett v. Blanco, 975
                                                                    

F.2d 934, 943 (1st Cir. 1992).  We take it here and find that

Knapp  has  proved  the  raw figures  and  defect  rate  just

discussed, any other conclusion  on this record being clearly

erroneous.

     As  for the  cost  of  the  shoes,  we  agree  with  the

magistrate judge that the most accurate figure is the average

price  of the shoes  purchased by Knapp,  rather than Knapp's

"Fifo  average cost."9   Using  the magistrate  judge's price

figures  for each model and applying that price to the larger

number of defective shoes that we have found to be present in

Knapp's  inventory  (14,806),   we  have  calculated  Knapp's

damages   for   defective   shoes  as   $338,138.31.      The

calculations, by model number, are set forth in Appendix A.  

     Knapp argues that  regardless of the precise  percentage

of defective shoes  in its  inventory, all of  the shoes  are

useless to it  because the number of  defects is too high  to

allow Knapp  to deliver the  shoes to customers  without fear

that   they  will  fall  apart  on  their  feet.    Knapp  is

essentially attempting  to invoke  through the back  door the

revocation of  acceptance remedy that Knapp  failed to invoke

                    
                                

     9Even  if we were to accept (as the magistrate judge did
not) that Knapp maintained a strict Fifo inventory procedure,
some  of  the new  shoes in  Knapp's Brockton  warehouse were
returned from field warehouses; some may have been from early
shipments, and the average  price figure therefore appears to
us to be the better measure.

                             -33-
                                         -33-


in  a timely manner.  Whatever decrease Knapp has suffered in

value  of  the  non-defective  shoes,  Knapp  inflicted  this

decrease on itself when it accepted the deliveries and failed

to revoke that acceptance within a reasonable time.

     Knapp  also   claimed  a  detailed  list  of  incidental

damages,  some of which were granted  by the magistrate judge

and  are not challenged by Sylvania on appeal.  Knapp insists

that it is  also entitled  to reimbursement for  a credit  it

issued to  Federal Express and for storage costs beyond those

granted by the magistrate judge.   The magistrate judge found

that  Knapp  had failed  to prove  that  it had  not received

credit from Sylvania or  replacements for the defective shoes

for which Federal Express demanded and received credit.

     We agree  that Knapp  failed to  prove that  this credit

represented  actual damages.10   As  to the  storage charges,

Knapp will be  credited only for  the amount attributable  to

the actually  defective shoes, as the  magistrate judge held,

but that amount  is increased  to $4,146 to  account for  the

enlarged number of defective shoes determined on this appeal.

The  result is achieved  by using the  magistrate judge's own

                    
                                

     10It is apparently undisputed  that Knapp gave credit to
its  customer Federal  Express  to  resolve complaints  about
defective  shoes.     Nevertheless,  the  evidence   left  it
uncertain whether  some of the shoes reflected in this figure
had  already been returned by Knapp to Sylvania or were among
shoes  in Knapp's  inventory, damages  for which  are already
reflected  in the calculations in Appendix A.  The burden was
on  Knapp to show actual damages without double counting, and
it failed to do so.  

                             -34-
                                         -34-


formula set forth in his March 1, 1995, decision.  

     Knapp further claims that it is entitled to lost profits

from the  shoes in inventory it  could not sell.   To recover

lost profits,  the plaintiff must show by  a preponderance of

the evidence that  the actionable breach caused  the loss and

that the loss was  foreseeable and calculable with reasonable

certainty.   Matsushita  Electric Corp.  v. Sonus  Corp., 284
                                                                    

N.E.2d 880,  890  (Mass. 1972).   For  the pre-February  1990

shipments,  Knapp's claim  is hopeless.   Knapp did  not show

that it  had an urgent  need for any  of that inventory,  nor

justify its  failure to obtain alternative  sources given its

knowledge  of persisting  problems.   See  UCC    2-715(2)(a)
                                                     

(consequential damages include only those losses "which could

not reasonably be prevented by cover or otherwise").

     With respect to the February 1990 shipment, the issue is

closer, because  Knapp established  at trial  that it had  an

urgent need for that inventory; the quality  of that shipment

was  even  lower   than  earlier  shipments;   and  Sebastiao

testified that Knapp lost orders because it could not deliver

these  shoes.  On  the other hand,  Knapp was  on notice that

Sylvania shoes suffered from  a high rate of defects,  so its

failure  to switch  to other, more  reliable suppliers  at an

earlier  date is hard to justify.   Knapp knew or should have

known  that it might well get defective shoes in the February

shipment, and  it chose  to take  that risk.   We  affirm the

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                                         -35-


magistrate  judge's  finding   that  lost  profits  are   not

appropriately awarded.

     Knapp  also  presses on  appeal  its  broader claim  for

consequential  damages.     It  presented  at   trial  expert

testimony  that because  of  the defective  shoes Knapp  lost

future profits  of $2,895,326 that  it would have  enjoyed on

other   sales   to   customers   who  left   Knapp   out   of
                 

dissatisfaction  with  its product.   Its  evidence certainly

showed  that its relationships  with important customers were

irretrievably damaged.   But it is  equally clear that  Knapp

could  have minimized the damage through reasonable diligence

by  increasing its  inspections  and, to  the extent  needed,

finding alternative suppliers.

     Although Sylvania  was at fault for  supplying defective

goods and must reimburse  Knapp for those goods proved  to be

defective,  Knapp cannot recover for  any larger harm done to

its  own  reputation and  customer  relations.   The  general

principle  is well  settled that  a party cannot  recover for

harms that its own reasonable precautions would have avoided.

Columbia  Novelty Co.  v. Leslie  Dawn,  Inc., 6  U.C.C. Rep.
                                                         

Serv.  (Callaghan) 679, 679 (N.Y.  App. Term 1969);  UCC   2-

715(2)(a).   To permit such  a recovery on  this record would

simply  reward Knapp  for  its own  lack  of attention,  poor

quality  control,  and  bad   judgment.    In  addition,  the

magistrate judge's order  terminating the injunction  against

                             -36-
                                         -36-


Sylvania, as entered on May 31, 1991 and amended  on June 10,

1991,  is vacated; the magistrate judge is free to reduce the

amount embargoed to the net  award plus anticipated costs and

interest.

                             -37-
                                         -37-


                          CONCLUSION

     In summary, Knapp is entitled to damages as follows:

     Cost of Defective Inventory:           $338,138.31
     Storage Costs:                           $4.146.00
     Unpaid Credits:                         $92,472.97 
     Credit to Miami Hilton:                  $9,250.00 
     Refund to Marriott:                      $3,194.54
     Price concessions to Federal Express:   $11,096.25
     Replacement shoes supplied to Hilton:    $6,401.20 
     Increased inspection costs:              $4,167.30
     Freight charges:                         $6,877.60
     Travel expenses:                         $1,793.92

     Total                                  $477,538.09

     The  first  two  entries  are adjusted  to  reflect  the

corrections  explained  in the  opinion;  the  others are  as

determined by  the magistrate judge in  rulings that Sylvania

has  not appealed.    The award  against  Knapp in  favor  of

Sylvania  for unpaid bills, in the amount of $223,626.47, has

also  not  been  challenged  on   appeal  and  so  stands  as

previously entered.  

     On  remand, the  judgment  should be  modified to  award

$477,538.09 to Knapp and $223,626.47 to Sylvania, so that the

net   award  is  now  in  Knapp's  favor  in  the  amount  of

$253,911.62.   It is so ordered.
                                           

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                                         -38-


                          Appendix A

Style  Defects New  x41.7%  Total    Ave Cost      Cost
1244   150     199     83     233    18.20     4,240.60
1245    63     189     79     142    23.75     3,372.50
1251   493     509    212     705    21.65    15,263.25
1257   111     402    168     279    26.25     7,323.75
2600   914     765    319   1,233    24.25    29,900.25
2601    47      60     25      72    25.75     1,854.00
2605   578   2,034    848   1,426    26.75    38,145.50
2660   485   1,926    803   1,288    23.25    29,946.00
2665   654     955    398   1,052    22.00    23,144.00
2670   464     599    250     714    27.90    19,920.60
2675   566     404    168     734    27.90    20,478.60
2810   514   2,438  1,017   1,531    21.91    33,544.21
2814    53   1,474    615     668    18.75    12,525.00
2815    51   1,311    547     598    22.10    13,215.80
2816    26      87     36      62    22.10     1,370.20
2840   125     548    229     354    27.40     9,699.60
2845   136   1,538    641     777    27.30    21,212.10
2916    39     264    110     149    18.75     2,793.75
2930   339   3,968  1,655   1,994    17.25    34,396.50
2935   211   1,302    543     754    19.90    15,004.60
2950     1      38     16      17    18.75       318.75
2955    25       0     25      25    18.75       468.75
                                                                   

Total 6,045  21,010  8,761 14,806            338,138.31

The first column refers  to the Knapp shoe style  number; the
second  column sets out  the number of  customer returns plus
shoes pulled  apart by Knapp personnel  in Knapp's inventory;
the  third column  sets  out  the  number  of  new  shoes  in
inventory; the  fourth column  gives the number  of defective
shoes among  the new shoes, based on  the statistical survey;
the fifth column gives the total number of defective shoes in
Knapp's inventory;  the sixth column gives  the average price
for each style; the last column gives the price paid by Knapp
for defective shoes still in inventory.

                             -39-
                                         -39-

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