F I L E D
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
JUL 13 2001
PUBLISH
PATRICK FISHER
Clerk
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
TENTH CIRCUIT
NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICE
COMPANY, an Oklahoma corporation,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
RONAN ENGINEERING COMPANY, a foreign
corporation, No. 99-5206
Defendant-Appellee,
and
MOTOROLA, INC., a Delaware corporation,
Defendant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Oklahoma
(D.C. No. 97-CV-860-H)
Joe M. Fears (Robert J. Bartz with him on the briefs) of Barber & Bartz, P.C.,
Tulsa, Oklahoma, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
Craig W. Hoster (Alexander F. King with him on the brief) of Crowe & Dunlevy,
Tulsa, Oklahoma, for Defendant-Appellee.
Before SEYMOUR and McWILLIAMS, Circuit Judges, and BELOT, * District
Judge.
SEYMOUR, Circuit Judge.
National Environmental Service Company (NESCO) sued Ronan
Engineering for negligence and breach of contract after Ronan failed to deliver a
leak detection system for underground fuel storage tanks. The jury found no
contract had been breached, and determined that while both parties had been
negligent in their dealings, NESCO’s negligence outweighed that of Ronan.
NESCO appeals, contending the district court erred in its rulings on two
evidentiary matters and one jury instruction. We affirm.
I
BACKGROUND
Project Negotiations
NESCO is an Oklahoma corporation which acts as a general contractor for
a variety of projects involving the installation and service of fuel systems. In
1994, it contracted with Tinker Air Force Base to upgrade Tinker’s fueling
*
The Honorable Monti L. Belot, United States District Judge, United States
District Court for the District of Kansas, sitting by designation.
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equipment, remove outdated underground fuel tanks and install new ones, and
install leak detection systems on the tanks. Ronan was brought in as a
subcontractor to design and install the leak detection systems.
Traditionally, leak detection systems in underground fuel tanks work via
telephone lines. Probes are installed in each fuel tank in order to measure fluid
level and other essential data, and a master computer “phones” the probes at pre-
programmed times to collect the data and monitor the condition of the tanks. For
this project, however, Tinker asked NESCO to explore the feasibility of using
radio-based communication in place of the traditional telephone linkage. The
NESCO representative responded that he would have to confer with Ronan.
When representatives from Ronan, NESCO, and Tinker eventually met to discuss
the feasibility of radio communications, the Ronan representative, sales manager
Mike Thornton, stated that he thought radio monitoring would be possible and
agreed to research the issue.
Mr. Thornton began discussions with Motorola, a well-known
manufacturer of radio systems, in order to discern whether Motorola radio
products might be suitable for the Tinker project. He requested a price quotation
that he might use in preparing a budget for the Tinker plan, and a Motorola sales
manager faxed him a price for equipment and installation of the leak detection
systems utilizing a radio model called Darcom. A message on the fax cover sheet
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included a caveat that “[d]ue to [Ronan’s] time frame only a cursory view has
been taken in preparing this budgetary quote.” App., vol. IV, at 704.
In February 1995, Mr. Thornton sent NESCO a projected price for the
Darcom radio system. The quote included charges for equipment and installation,
and it specified that the project would be completed between four and six weeks
after receipt of the project order. The letter also included the following
statements:
The following quote is only a cursory view for budgetary purposes
and the final components and costs are subject to change dependent
on actual site conditions. This equipment is dependent on line-of-
site [sic] [radio frequency] paths from each remote and each master
site. This equipment proposes to use frequencies between 928-952
mhz and it will be the users [sic] responsibility to obtain authorized
frequencies and to acquire approval from the Base LMR office.
Id. at 742. The NESCO representative, Charles Nance, did not ask Mr. Thornton
about the “cursory view” language. Instead, he testified that he understood this
language to mean the price was firm unless later modifications were required due
to frequency changes or line-of-sight problems. Mr. Nance orally notified a
Tinker official of the quote.
The parties then waited several months for Tinker’s decision. In fall 1995,
Tinker notified NESCO that it would need a firm price based on a specified
frequency. Mr. Nance phoned Mr. Thornton to request the price, following up
with a fax that read in part:
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Tinker AFB is still wanting to look at operating the Ronan Tank
Monitor’s [sic] via a radio frequency instead of telephone lines or
[cellular] service. Please work me up a FIRM price using frequency
142.6750, detailing everything that will be included and every thing
that NESCO will need to furnish or do. Everything is still the same
as before . . . .
Id. at 709 (emphasis in original). Mr. Thornton called Motorola for a final quote,
only to learn that the Darcom radios would not work on the given frequency.
Finding a frequency that could work with the Darcom system would take many
months. After further research, the Motorola representative suggested a model
called R-Net to replace the Darcom system.
Motorola sent Ronan the R-Net quote in late November, adding “I hope this
will let you complete your project. All of this is dependent on the clearance of
this project through the Base LMR office on Tinker.” Id. at 710. Ronan added its
standard markup and installation fees and forwarded the quote to NESCO, giving
an estimated completion time of three to four weeks after receipt of the project
order. The Ronan quote included substantially the same language as was given in
its earlier communications:
The following quote is a cursory view for budgetary purposes and the
final components and costs are subject to change dependent on actual
site conditions. This equipment is dependent on line-of-site [sic]
[radio frequency] paths from each remote and each master site. This
equipment proposes to use frequency 142.6750 MHz and it will be
the users [sic] responsibility to obtain approval from the Base LMR
office for this frequency.
Id. at 712. It went on to say that the R-Net equipment was less sensitive to line-
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of-sight problems than the earlier model, but that a clear line of sight would be
preferable nonetheless. Mr. Nance testified that he recognized the “cursory view”
language from Ronan’s earlier quote and again understood it to mean that later
system modifications might lead to changes in price. He explained that he paid
little attention to continued use of the disclaimer because he had requested a firm
price and because on this occasion Ronan had sufficient time to give the project
more than “cursory” consideration.
NESCO submitted its final project proposal to Tinker in January 1996. The
leak detection portion of that proposal was based on the equipment and
installation costs from Ronan’s quote and included Ronan’s qualifications
regarding frequency changes and line-of-sight problems. Mr. Thornton testified
that he knew NESCO would use the Ronan quote in making its own proposal to
Tinker, as this was standard practice in the industry. Tinker changed the
proposed radio frequency in early February, but the change had no effect upon the
proposed project price. Ronan and NESCO simply issued new quotes that were
identical to the old except for the frequency alteration.
In March 1996, as the two companies awaited a final decision by Tinker,
Mike Thornton contacted Charles Nance to request a purchase order for the radio
project so that Ronan could include the project in its first fiscal quarter sales. Mr.
Nance executed a purchase order referencing the agreed-upon equipment and
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faxed the purchase order to Ronan. Since the project still had not received final
approval from Tinker, however, he warned that the order was “pending upon
approval in writing from the Tulsa District Corps of Engineers” and added,
“[p]lease do not send any invoices until material has been received.” Id. at 718.
NESCO and Tinker finalized their negotiations on April 9, 1996. In order
to expedite receipt of the radio equipment, a Tinker official provided written
approval for NESCO to execute its purchase order with Ronan. The Tinker letter
reflected an expected completion date of June 26, 1996, which was calculated by
adding together six weeks to order and receive the equipment and the three to four
weeks that Ronan had estimated would be required for installation. Mr. Nance
faxed the approval notice to Ronan on April 16 and requested that the equipment
purchase order be executed immediately. He did not mention the expected
completion date.
Completion Problems
After telling Ronan to execute the purchase order, NESCO began to await
receipt of the radio equipment. Mr. Nance heard nothing from Ronan until May
10, when he received a letter from Mr. Thornton stating Ronan had just learned
from Motorola that reaching the required frequency required the growth of
“custom crystals” for the radios, a process that would take six to eight weeks.
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Ronan requested test radios from Motorola so that project testing could proceed,
but for radios with the correct frequency there was no choice but to await the
crystals. This would put project completion at least two weeks past the
previously specified date of June 26, but Tinker reluctantly agreed to wait. On
May 20, Mr. Thornton informed NESCO that the equipment manufacturing
process would take another eleven weeks and the radios were now due to arrive in
mid-August.
Unbeknownst to NESCO, Mr. Thornton’s new supervisor at Ronan began
to doubt the feasibility of the proposed radio communications. Razmik Haftvani,
the new head of Ronan’s Leak Detection Division, contacted Motorola in early
May for detailed information about the R-Net specifications. On learning the full
facts, Mr. Haftvani had “reservations” that the project would work as specified.
These reservations were not communicated to NESCO, which received and signed
the final Tinker contracts in July. All portions of the project not involving Ronan
were complete by this point, and NESCO left the job site to await action by
Ronan.
Back at Ronan, Mr. Haftvani received the test radios on July 25. He
immediately realized they would not work for their assigned function. The master
leak detection computer was designed to call each tank sequentially to poll its
data, and because the radios worked on the same frequency, they would all answer
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a radio call simultaneously. Mr. Haftvani contacted Motorola to complain that the
radios would not support sequential polling—the Motorola representative agreed,
explaining that Ronan had never told him sequential polling would be necessary.
The Tinker project would work as planned only if Ronan purchased expensive
software to modify the R-Net radios or switched to a different radio model called
MOSCAD, which would support the polling function.
Mr. Nance contacted Ronan around August 1 and was told there were
problems with the radio system but that Ronan was working on the problems. He
relayed this information to Tinker. Mr. Thornton wrote to Mr. Nance on August 8
to explain the R-Net polling problem. He stated that the only two options would
be to obtain thirty-four different frequencies (one for each underground tank), an
unwieldy solution, or switch to MOSCAD radios, which cost about three times
more than the R-Net model. NESCO had signed a formal contract with Tinker for
the radio modifications on August 9. It notified Tinker of the polling problems
on August 19.
Over the next few weeks, Tinker put increasing pressure upon NESCO to
find a solution to the radio problems. The project was now over two months past
its expected completion date of June 26, and the contract provided liquidated
damages for every day by which project completion exceeded this date. NESCO
and Ronan continued to negotiate a solution throughout the fall of 1996, but
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NESCO eventually hired a different engineering company to complete the project.
In the end, the project cost much more than originally anticipated and NESCO
suffered significant financial losses.
This Lawsuit
NESCO filed this action against Ronan, alleging breach of contract for
Ronan’s failure to complete the leak detection project and seeking restitution for
NESCO’s financial loss. Alternatively, NESCO alleged Ronan was negligent in
the course of their dealings. Ronan denied the existence of a contract and raised
several affirmative defenses. Ronan also countersued, alleging NESCO was itself
negligent during contract negotiations. Several months later, NESCO added
Motorola as a codefendant, alleging breach of contract and negligent
misrepresentation in Motorola’s failure to deliver appropriate radio systems.
Motorola and Ronan then cross-claimed against one another.
The district court granted Motorola’s pretrial motion to dismiss on
NESCO’s contract claim. At the close of discovery, the court granted Motorola’s
motion to dismiss on NESCO’s negligence claim as well. The court also
dismissed Ronan’s cross-claims against Motorola a few weeks before trial, thus
removing Motorola from the case entirely. The lawsuit proceeded to a jury trial
in the district court. The jury returned two special verdicts, finding first that
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Ronan had not breached a contract with NESCO and, second, that NESCO was
sixty percent negligent and Ronan forty percent negligent. Because NESCO’s
negligence liability outweighed that of Ronan, NESCO recovered no damages
from the suit. NESCO’s motion for a new trial was denied.
On appeal, NESCO raises the same arguments presented in its motion for a
new trial. It contends the district court erred in allowing a Ronan employee to
testify regarding Ronan’s internal policy against entering into binding contracts
for nonstandard jobs. It also argues the court should have instructed the jury that
a contract may be formed despite the unexpressed reservations of one party.
Finally, NESCO contends the court erred in allowing evidence of NESCO’s
claims against Motorola. We address each argument in turn.
II
RONAN INTERNAL POLICY
Before trial, NESCO filed a motion in limine objecting to planned
testimony by Razmik Haftvani, Ronan’s director of engineering and manager of
the leak detection division, regarding Ronan’s alleged internal policy under which
it did not enter into binding contracts on “nonstandard” jobs without first
obtaining approval from its engineering department. NESCO argued the internal
policy was irrelevant to whether a contract was formed because the Uniform
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Commercial Code (UCC), as adopted in Oklahoma, allows only objective
evidence of a party’s intent to form a contract. Because the internal policy was
never communicated to NESCO, the policy was indicative of subjective, not
objective, intent. See App., vol. I, at 63-64. NESCO further objected that Mr.
Haftvani was not an appropriate party to testify about contract negotiations
because he was not personally a part of the negotiation process. Id. at 62. The
objections were addressed at a pre-trial conference, whose proceedings are not
reproduced in the record.
At the end of the third day of trial, Ronan requested the court to revisit the
issues raised in NESCO’s motion in limine. Ronan argued the evidence already
presented had laid sufficient foundation for allowing testimony about the internal
policy. NESCO continued to object that unexpressed reservations are irrelevant
to contract formation under the UCC. The court took the question under
advisement overnight. See App., vol. III, at 559-60. The next morning, the court
ruled that Mr. Haftvani’s testimony regarding Ronan’s normal business practice
would be allowed. Mr. Haftvani testified regarding the Ronan policy, and
NESCO appeals the admission of his testimony.
We generally review a district court’s determination regarding admission of
evidence for abuse of discretion. Boughton v. Cotter Corp., 65 F.3d 823, 832
(10th Cir. 1995). If the complaining party failed to make a contemporaneous
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objection at trial, however, we review the ruling under a plain error standard.
Pandit v. Am. Honda Motor Co., Inc., 82 F.3d 376, 379 (10th Cir. 1996); Fed. R.
Evid. 103(d). Ronan contends NESCO’s objections to Mr. Haftvani’s testimony
should be reviewed only for plain error because NESCO did not object at the time
of the testimony. We have delineated a three-part test for whether a party must
object at the time of trial in order to renew objections made in an earlier motion
in limine: “To overcome the claim of waiver for failure to contemporaneously
object, we must satisfy ourselves that (1) the matter was adequately presented to
the district court; (2) the issue was of a type that can be finally decided prior to
trial; and (3) the court’s ruling was definitive.” Pandit, 82 F.2d at 380.
Here, the issues were adequately presented to the district court in NESCO’s
initial motion in limine as well as the arguments presented to the court directly
preceding Mr. Haftvani’s testimony. Although Mr. Haftvani had not yet testified,
it was understood he would testify that Ronan had an internal policy against
entering binding contracts on nonstandard jobs without express approval from its
engineering department. The district court’s ruling did not depend on the actual
explanation given by Mr. Haftvani in his testimony; rather, it was a determination
whether the testimony should be allowed at all. As such, it was of a type that
could be decided prior to trial. Moreover, the court’s ruling was definitive,
stating Ronan would be allowed to present the challenged testimony and NESCO
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could cross-examine thereafter. See App., vol. III, at 566. Considering in
particular that the issue was revisited directly before the challenged testimony
was offered, there was no need for NESCO to renew its objections at the moment
the testimony was offered. Consequently, we review this evidentiary issue for
abuse of discretion rather than plain error.
One of the central questions in this case is whether the communications
between Ronan and NESCO were sufficient to constitute a binding contract, or
were instead mere negotiations over a possibility of contracting with one another.
If no contract was formed, Ronan bore no responsibility to furnish NESCO with
the leak detection system. The law does not recognize a contract unless both
parties showed a “meeting of the minds” in their intent to form one.
Traditionally, at common law as well as in Oklahoma statutory law, this intent
was measured subjectively; consent to form the contract was “not mutual unless
the parties all agree[d] upon the same thing in the same sense.” Bradford v.
Plains Cotton Coop. Assoc., 539 F.2d 1249, 1253 (10th Cir. 1976) (quoting pre-
UCC Oklahoma statute, O KLA . S TAT . tit. 15, § 66 (1910)). 1
1
Even under the traditional regime, however, this subjective intent had to
be measured in some observable form. Thus, as Judge Learned Hand explained a
half-century before Oklahoma adopted the UCC:
A contract has, strictly speaking, nothing to do with the personal, or
individual, intent of the parties. A contract is an obligation attached
(continued...)
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Oklahoma adopted the UCC in 1961, joining a national scheme to replace
the varying laws of each state with a set of rules that are uniform among the
states. This case is controlled by the post-UCC version of Oklahoma contract
law, which provides:
(1) A contract for sale of goods may be made in any manner
sufficient to show agreement, including conduct by both parties
which recognizes the existence of such a contract.
(2) An agreement sufficient to constitute a contract for sale may be
found even though the moment of its making is undetermined.
(3) Even though one or more terms are left open a contract for sale
does not fail for indefiniteness if the parties have intended to make a
contract and there is a reasonably certain basis for giving an
appropriate remedy.
O KLA . S TAT . tit. 12A, § 2-204 (1991). The reliance upon “conduct by both parties
which recognizes the existence of . . . a contract” suggests an increased emphasis
on objective, observable manifestations of intent to contract. Thus, we have held
that the statute “rejects the more subjective test of intent” to focus entirely upon
1
(...continued)
by the mere force of law to certain acts of the parties, usually words,
which ordinarily accompany and represent a known intent. . . . Of
course, if it appear by other words, or acts, of the parties, that they
attribute a peculiar meaning to such words as they use in the
contract, that meaning will prevail, but only by virtue of the other
words, and not because of their unexpressed intent.
Hotchkiss v. Nat’l City Bank of N.Y., 200 F. 287, 293 (S.D.N.Y. 1911).
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objective behavior, asking whether there was “mutuality of assent as manifested
by the conduct of the parties.” Bradford, 539 F.2d at 1253 (construing Oklahoma
UCC statute); see also Cargill, Inc. v. Stafford, 553 F.2d 1222, 1224 (10th Cir.
1977) (same conclusion under Colorado UCC statute).
NESCO argues Ronan’s testimony about its internal policy against entering
into binding contracts on nonstandard jobs was offered as evidence that Ronan
representatives could not have intended to contract with NESCO during the
course of their negotiations. NESCO contends the policy was irrelevant because
it was never communicated to NESCO. Under the current UCC standard, only
words and actions actually shared with the other party may be considered as
evidence of intent. Intent must be determined based solely on a reasonable
interpretation of the written and oral communications between the two companies,
without regard to any unexpressed reservations. See generally United States v.
Commercial Mech’l Contractors, Inc., 707 F.2d 1124, 1127 (10th Cir. 1982) (both
oral and written communications can form basis for contract).
NESCO is correct in asserting that, under the UCC, it is inappropriate to
allow testimony regarding one party’s unexpressed subjective reservations as
evidence that a contract was never formed. The district court did not allow the
testimony for that purpose, however. As the court explained in its denial of
NESCO’s motion for new trial:
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[A]t trial, NESCO asserted that Ronan’s use of the language “cursory
view for budgetary purposes” was lifted directly from similar
language in a quote by Motorola to Ronan and did not reflect
Ronan’s reservations about entering a non-standard contract. The
Court determined that this assertion provided a sufficient evidentiary
basis for introduction of Ronan’s internal policy regarding non-
standard contracts and therefore admitted testimony regarding
Ronan’s internal policy.
App., vol. I, at 209. Thus, the testimony was allowed to rebut other evidence
offered by NESCO purporting to explain the meaning of the “cursory view”
language, itself a valid objective manifestation of intent not to contract.
If the law requires objective manifestations of a party’s intent, as we have
just explained it does, these objective signs must be interpreted as they appear to
a reasonable observer under the circumstances. No negotiations exist in a
vacuum, and the circumstances of the parties’ communications can be essential
for determining a reasonable interpretation of a particular statement. At trial,
testimony established that Ronan representatives mentioned during negotiations
they would have to confer with Ronan’s engineering department about the radio
communications. See, e.g., App., vol. III, at 450 (Mr. Thornton “would have to
check with the engineers with Ronan” before proceeding). To that extent, the
challenged testimony could be seen as an explanation of the reason for those
actual communications with NESCO. Apparently this was the view taken by the
district court. Viewing the evidence in that light, we are not persuaded the trial
court abused its discretion in admitting Mr. Haftvani’s testimony.
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III
JURY INSTRUCTION ON INTENT
In a related issue, NESCO requested before trial that the jury be instructed
as follows: “[i]f the words and actions of the parties demonstrate the existence of
an agreement, then a contract exists, even though one of the parties may harbor
unexpressed reservations or objections to the existence of that contract.” App.,
vol. I, at 85. The cited legal authority was one case from the Missouri court of
appeals and one from Arizona. See Computer Network, Ltd. v. Purcell Tire &
Rubber Co., 747 S.W.2d 669, 675 (Mo. App. 1988); Salt River Project Agric.
Improvement & Power Dist. v. Westinghouse Elec. Corp., 694 P.2d 267, 276
(Ariz. App.), vacated in part, 694 P.2d 198 (Ariz. 1984). Ronan objected that the
requested instruction was not an accurate reflection of Oklahoma law. See App.,
vol. II, at 358. The court agreed the “proposed instruction had no basis in
Oklahoma law,” App., vol. I, at 211, and ultimately rejected it.
Because the UCC is intended to be applied uniformly across the various
states, courts routinely turn to decisions from other states when there is no case
law on point within the relevant jurisdiction. For example, in Reynolds-Wilson
Lumber Co. v. Peoples National Bank, 699 P.2d 146 (Okla. 1985), the Oklahoma
Supreme Court observed with disapproval that one party did “not attempt to
distinguish [cases cited by the other], but instead simply brush[ed] them aside
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because they were decided in other jurisdictions.” 699 P.2d at 149. Similarly,
that court held a lower court was “incorrect” in refusing to consider the other
decisions in its rulings. Id. In contrast, the state supreme court considered the
cases “persuasive . . . in the absence of any Oklahoma decisions on the point, and
in view of the policy of the Oklahoma Uniform Commercial Code ‘to make
uniform the law among the various jurisdictions.’” Id. (quoting O KLA . S TAT . tit.
12A, § 1-102(2)(c) (1981)). The Oklahoma Supreme Court also used the UCC
decisions of other states to inform its own holdings in Barker v. Allied
Supermarket, 596 P.2d 870, 871 (Okla. 1979) and Mid-Continental Casualty Co.
v. First National Bank and Trust Co. of Chickasha, 531 P.2d 1370 (Okla. 1975),
explaining in the latter case that it found the decisions of the other states to be
“viable and persuasive.” 531 P.2d at 1373.
Furthermore, as we explained above, the requested instruction was indeed a
correct statement of law under the Oklahoma UCC. Nevertheless, we review a
trial court’s decisions regarding jury instructions for abuse of discretion. Hinds v.
Gen. Motors Corp., 988 F.2d 1039, 1046 (10th Cir. 1993), and the exclusion of
one correct statement of law does not necessarily constitute error. Rather, “[t]he
instructions as a whole need only convey a correct statement of the applicable
law.” Wheeler v. John Deere Co., 862 F.2d 1404, 1411-12 (10th Cir. 1988). In
considering the instructions on appeal, we take into account “all the jury heard,
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and from the standpoint of the jury, decide not whether the charge was faultless in
every particular, but whether the jury was misled in any way.” Id. at 1411
(internal quotations omitted).
Here, the jury was instructed as follows:
A contract for sale may be made in any manner sufficient to
show agreement, including language or conduct by both parties
which recognizes the existence of such a contract.
A contract for sale may be found to exist even though the
moment of its making is undetermined.
Even though one or more terms are left open, a contract for
sale does not fail for indefiniteness if the parties have intended to
make a contract and there is a reasonably certain basis for giving an
appropriate remedy.
A contract may be express or implied. An express contract is
set out in words, either spoken or written. An implied contract is
created by the acts or conduct of the parties. No particular form is
required for words or conduct to create either an express or implied
contract.
App., vol. I, at 161-62 (emphasis added). The instructions were correct
statements of law, taken from O KLA . S TAT . tit. 12A, § 2-204 and Oklahoma
Uniform Jury Instruction 23.3, respectively. See App., vol. I, at 211. The court
found these instructions “made it clear that formation of a contract depends upon
the parties’ objective manifestations of agreement, rather than upon their
subjective intent,” id. at 212. We agree.
There was further support for the objective requirements in the definitions
of “offer” and “acceptance.” The jury was told a party could “manifest its intent
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to be bound by an agreement by words or by conduct from which a reasonable
person could find that the party intended to be bound by the agreement” and
further that “[c]onduct by both parties which recognized the existence of a
contract is sufficient to establish a contract for sale although the writings of the
parties do not otherwise establish a contract.” Id. at 164, 166 (emphasis added).
There was one problematic instruction, however. The jury was told:
In this case, you must decide the meaning of the Ronan
quotation to NESCO dated February 14, 1996. To do this you must
decide what the intent of the parties was when Ronan made and
NESCO received that quotation.
To decide what their intent was you should first examine the
language of that quotation. You may also consider the circumstances
under which Ronan made and NESCO received the quotation, and
what the parties themselves believed the terms of the quotation meant
as shown by the evidence. You may also consider the past dealings
of the parties and the language of previous quotations.
Id. at 167 (emphasis added). The italicized language appears to allow
consideration of subjective intent. NESCO never objected to this language during
the preparation or communication of the jury instructions. It now argues that this
language is particularly problematic given the trial testimony regarding Ronan’s
internal policy against nonstandard contracts. It contends its proffered instruction
on disregarding subjective intent would have cured any potential for improper
considerations by the jury. While that may be true, we believe the jury
instructions as a whole conveyed an acceptable statement of Oklahoma contract
law. The court’s decision to exclude the proffered instruction is not reversible
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error.
IV
CLAIM AGAINST MOTOROLA
Finally, NESCO contends the trial court erred in allowing Ronan to cross-
examine Charles Nance about NESCO’s lawsuit against Motorola. NESCO
argues mention of the suit against Motorola was unfairly prejudicial to its case
and posed a danger of distracting the jury from the true issues at hand. However,
the disputed questions came in response to Mr. Nance’s assertion that he did not
blame Motorola for the problems that occurred in the Tinker project. See App.,
vol. II, at 363. In the face of that assertion, it was appropriate for Ronan to point
out that NESCO had, indeed, blamed Motorola for its problems. Moreover, the
court was careful to limit the scope of the Motorola questions, and the cross-
examination moved on to other topics after a single question. See id. at 364-66.
The district court did not abuse its discretion in allowing the Motorola question.
V
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
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