Steves and Sons, Inc. v. Jeld-Wen, Inc., No. 3:2016cv00545 - Document 1773 (E.D. Va. 2018)

Court Description: MEMORANDUM OPINION. Signed by District Judge Robert E. Payne on 09/28/2018. (smej, )

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Steves and Sons, Inc. v. Jeld-Wen, Inc. Doc. 1773 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA Richmond Division STEVES AND SONS, INC., Plaintiff, Civil Action No. 3:16-cv-545 V. JELD-WEN, INC., Defendant. MEMORANDUM OPINION This matter is before the Court on JELD-WEN, INC.'S MOTION FOR JUDGMENT AS A MATTER OF LAW AGAINST STEVES & SONS, INC. (ECF No. 968), to the extent that JELD-WEN, Inc. (JELD-WEN") seeks judgment as ("Steves") based Steves (1) for 121 paragraph of the of JELD-WEN's and cost through and as on doors of the reflected and far as to reimburse (as 1022), paragraphs 8, 9, 10 and 11. and VERDICT Inc.'s claim Steves to by pleaded Complaint the that failure manufactured in Sons, as JELD-WEN's doorskins 132 Steves claim failure (2) of defective 181 law contract doorskins; incorporated numbers matter breach on; defective a in for reimburse Steves in is that paragraph COUNT FORM (ECF TWO, No. The Court previously took those issues under advisement when it resolved the rest of JELDWEN's motion. See ECF No. 1042 at 2. For the reasons set forth below, JELD-WEN, INC.'S MOTION FOR JUDGMENT AS A MATTER OF LAW Dockets.Justia.com AGAINST STEVES & SONS, INC. (EOF No. 968) will be granted as to COUNT TWO on those specific issues and paragraphs 8, 9, 10, and 11 of the verdict will be vacated. BACKGROUND Steves is an independent manufacturer of interior molded doors, and it relies primarily on JELD-WEN to supply it with the doorskins needed to make the doors. See Summary Judgment Op. (ECF No. 976) at 2. Accordingly, on May 1, 2012, Steves and JELD-WEN entered into a long-term supply agreement ("the Supply Agreement"), pursuant to which Steves would purchase interior molded doorskins from JELD-WEN. See Supply Agm't (ECF No. 1114- 1) at 1. That Agreement contained a doorskin quality provision that stated: The [doorskins] will at all times be of a quality satisfactory to STEVES, meeting JELD-WEN's specifications, fit for the intended purpose, and subject to JELD-WEN's standard written warranty applicable to the [doorskins] (the "Specifications"). If JELDWEN ships [doorskins] that do not meet JELDWEN's Specifications (hereinafter "Defective Product") then JELD-WEN, after notice, inspection and verification of the Defective Product, will be obliged to reimburse STEVES for the price of the Defective Product. . . . Any additional costs over the price of the Defective Product shall be negotiated . . . on a case by case basis. JELD-WEN will not be liable for any claim by STEVES for Defective Product caused by STEVES' own negligence. Id. § 8. In COUNT TWO of the Complaint, Steves asserted that JELD- WEN violated this provision in two ways. First, JELD-WEN allegedly supplied Steves with defective doorskins and did not reimburse Steves for the price of those doorskins after notice and inspection. Second, Steves claimed that the Supply Agreement obligated JELD-WEN to reimburse Steves for the full cost of its interior molded doors that incorporated defective doorskins. According to Steves, even though Section 8 ostensibly permitted JELD-WEN to negotiate reimbursement for such costs on a case by case basis, JELD-WEN had consistently reimbursed Steves for the full door cost before JELD-WEN's 2012 acquisition of CraftMaster Manufacturing, Inc. ("the 2012 Merger"), but it unilaterally ceased such practice after that date in order to harin Steves.^ At trial, the jury agreed with both arguments. The jury first concluded that JELD-WEN breached Section 8 by supplying Steves with defective appropriately. As a doorskins result of and failing to that breach, the reimburse jury it found, Steves had suffered $441,458 in damages. Jury Verdict (ECF No. 1022) nil 8-9. determined reimburse As that to the Steves for the second Supply the alleged Agreement cost of doors breach, required made the jury JELD-WEN using to defective ^ These contentions and theories were also presented as part of COUNT FIVE, wherein Steves sought declaratory relief on the same basis as asserted in COUNT TWO. That aspect of COUNT FIVE was not presented to the jury. doorskins those and that costs. JELD-WEN Consequently, refused the to jury reimburse found that Steves for Steves was entitled to an additional $1,776,813 in damages. Id. Hf 10-11. JELD-WEN now challenges the jury's determinations as to both theories of liability.^ DISCUSSION I. Legal Standard A court may grant judgment as a matter of law against a party on a claim if the party "has been fully heard on an issue" at trial and "the court finds that a reasonable jury would not have a legally sufficient evidentiary basis to find for the party on that issue," assuming that a "favorable finding on that issue" is necessary for the party to prevail on the claim. Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(a)(1). In other words, "[j]udgment as a matter of law 'is properly granted if the nonmoving party failed to make a showing on an essential element of his case with respect to which he Collection had the Servs., burden Inc., of 763 proof.'" F.3d 385, Russell 391 (4th v. Absolute Cir. 2014) (quoting Wheatley v. Wicomico Cty., 390 F.3d 328, 332 (4th Cir. 2004)). To recover for breach of contract under Delaware law. ^ Although JELD-WEN properly moved for judgment as a matter of law before the case was submitted to the jury. Fed. R. Civ. P. 50(a)(2), the Court took the motion under advisement as to these two issues so that it could reserve its decision on the pertinent legal questions and consider the parties' supplemental post-verdict briefing. See id. 50(b). Steves must prove, for each alleged breach: (1) the existence of a contractual obligation, (2) JELD-WEN's breach of that obligation, and (3) the resulting damage to Steves. Connelly v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 135 A.3d 1271, 1279 n.28 (Del. 2016). Thus, if Steves did not provide sufficient evidence for the jury to conclude that JELD-WEN failed to reimburse Steves for defective doorskins, doorskins or if or Steves the failed cost of to doors prove with that defective JELD-WEN was contractually obligated to do so, then judgment as a matter of law on the two unresolved grounds underlying Count Two would be appropriate. II. Failure to Reimburse for Defective Doorskins The witness on whom Steves relied to explain the defective doorskin reimbursement ("Gartner"). discovered He the process explained defects that in in detail Steves JELD-WEN's was Doug employees doorskins Gartner generally when the employees flip doorskins from a pallet into a stack for door construction. Feb. 2 Trial Tr. (ECF No. 1028) at 530:9-14. Defective doorskins were then sent to Steves' vendor debit memo ("VDM") department, where employees prepared a separate VDM for each product with numerous details—including the size and species of the product, its manufacture date, its die number, and the specific defect. Id. at 529:21-530:2. According to Gartner, the employees who are assigned to identify defects are trained to detect specific defects and can differentiate between defects that are caused by JELD-WEN and those that are caused by Steves (which are not recorded in VDMs because Section 8 of the Supply Agreement precludes reimbursement for such defects). Id. at 530:25-532:11; see also Supply Agm't § 8 ("JELD-WEN will not be liable for any claim by S[teves] for Defective Product caused by S[teves]' own negligence."). Steves then submitted the VDMs to JELD-WEN to initiate the reimbursement process. Feb. 2 Trial Tr. at 529:4-10. From 2010 to 2011, JELD-WEN responded "very promptly" after receiving VDMs from Steves, sometimes inspecting the defective doorskin at Steves' plant and sometimes simply extending Steves a credit based on a picture of the defect. Id. at 529:11-17. After October 2012, however, Steves experienced more doorskin defects, and JELD-WEN became "much more stringent" in reimbursing for the defects described in the VDMs. Id. at 528:25-529:9, 532:12-17. Likewise, Edward Steves stated that, before the 2012 Merger, JELD-WEN would generally extend Steves credit after it submitted letters about doorskin defects. Feb. 3 Trial Tr. (EOF No. 1029) at 679:17-680:1. But, in 2014, there was a change in procedure. Following this change in procedure, JELD-WEN did not accept for reimbursement "a large portion of those [doorskins]" that Steves had identified as defective. Id. at 683:3-4. The jury's doorskins noted was during Tucker award drawn the of $441,458 for unreimbursed directly from the identical testimony of (^'Tucker"), See Feb. Steves' 7 Trial damages Tr. defective VDM figures expert, (ECF No. Avram 1032) at 1200:1-4. To calculate that figure. Tucker reviewed a database with Steves' amount VDMs reimbursed Steves' total from by 2015 to JELD-WEN purchase price 2017, subtracting the for defective doorskins for doorskins for total which from it submitted VDMs. Id. at 1199:6-14, 1200:1-4. He did not elaborate on Gartner's and Edward Steves' statements about the VDM process, or testify further about the specific details of the VDMs that he reviewed. JELD-WEN argues that this evidence does not support the jury's conclusion that JELD-WEN violated the Supply Agreement by failing to reimburse for defective doorskins for two reasons. First, it contends that Section 8's reimbursement obligation is not implicated here because Steves presented no evidence that the defective doorskins did not meet JELD-WEN's specifications or were Second, not subject to JELD-WEN's standard JELD-WEN says, Steves has failed written to connect warranty. Tucker's general damages with particular VDMs, preventing the jury from being able to determine that any of the unreimbursed doorskins were actually reimbursement. defective in a way that would require The construction of the Supply Agreement makes JELD-WEN's first argument unpersuasive. Section 8 only requires JELD-WEN to reimburse Steves for the price of the defective doorskins—after notice, inspection, and verification by JELD-WEN—"[i]f JELD-WEN ships [doorskins] that do not meet JELD-WEN^ s Specifications.^^ Supply Agm't § 8 (emphasis added). The meaning of "Specifications" is unclear given the ambiguous structure of the preceding sentence: "The [doorskins] will at all times be of a quality satisfactory to S[teves], meeting JELD-WEN's specifications, fit for the intended purpose, and subject to JELD-WEN's standard written warranty applicable to the [doorskins] (the 'Specifications')." Given that the definition parenthetical follows a list of items, "Specifications" as used in the reimbursement provision could refer to one of three things: (1) the same "specifications" that are mentioned in the list; (2) the "standard written warranty applicable to the [doorskins]"; or (3) some collective standard that includes all four things in the list. Applying the first two definitions would, in JELD-WEN's view, compel the Court to grant judgment as a matter evidence warranty. of about law because JELD-WEN's Steves, on the Steves allegedly specifications other hand, or argues did not present standard written that the third definition is most appropriate based on the substance of the negotiations underlying the Supply Agreement. Steves' interpretation of the meaning of "Specifications" is reasonable; without any clear guidance in Section 8, the definition could easily apply collectively to all four terms in the list. In addition, Steves presented sufficient evidence at trial to convince the jury to adopt its reading. The Supply Agreement specifically prohibits resolving this definitional ambiguity against either Steves or JELD-WEN as the drafter of the contract. See id. § 17 ("No ambiguity shall be construed against any party based upon a claim that said party drafted any language in question."). Nonetheless, Delaware law allows extrinsic evidence (such as the parties' negotiations, industry custom, or course of performance) to be considered in deciding between competing reasonable interpretations. Salamone V. Gorman, 106 A.3d 354, 374 (Del. 2014); LSVC Holdings, LLC v. Vestcom Parent 6629209, at *6 Holdings, (Del. Inc., No. CV Dec. 29, 2017); Ch. 8424-VCMR, see 2017 also WL United Rentals, Inc. v. RAM Holdings, Inc., 937 A.2d 810, 834 (Del. Ch. 2007). Indeed, the Court instructed the jury that it could consider those factors to interpret the appropriate meaning of Section 8. See Jury Instructions (ECF No. 1025), Instruction No. 40; see also Del. P.J.I. Civ. § 19.15 (2000). At trial, Edward Steves—who Supply Agreement on Steves' "primarily interested" only negotiated the behalf—testified: (1) in the terms of the that he was requirement that the doorskins ''be of a quality satisfactory to S[teves]"; and (2) that Steves was not aware of doorskin specifications that JELDWEN may have had 2012. Feb. 3 when executing the Supply Agreement in May Trial Tr. at 622:16-623:18. Witnesses also described aesthetic defects that made certain JELD-WEN doorskins unsatisfactory to Steves. See Steves Suppl. Response (ECF No. 1282) at 1 (summarizing testimony). Consequently, even if Steves presented no evidence that the doorskins did not meet JELD-WEN's specifications^ or were not subject to its standard written warranty, the jury could have relied on the foregoing evidence to conclude that "Specifications" included all four items in the preceding list and that some doorskins did not satisfy Steves' subjective quality expectations.^ Accordingly, JELD-WEN would ^ A JELD-WEN witness, Stephen Fancher ("Fancher"), stated that JELD-WEN provided Steves with its technical specifications in September 2014 at the latest, see Feb. 9 Trial Tr. 1034) at 1797:7-24, so Steves would have been aware (ECF No. of those specifications when submitting its VDMs to JELD-WEN from 2015 to 2017. Nonetheless, claims Fancher typically characteristics" also concern that are testified "more not that reimbursement aesthetic, addressed in those physical technical specifications, and that JELD-WEN has separate aesthetic specifications that it never provided to Steves. Id. at 1824:516, 1829:5-10. Accordingly, Steves' failure of proof would not doom its defective doorskins claim were it based on aesthetic defects not covered by JELD-WEN's technical specifications. ^ Fancher indicated that whether doorskins are "of a quality satisfactory to Steves" assessing whether specifications." See testimony appears can be determined objectively by the doorskins "meet[] JELD-WEN's Feb. 9 Trial Tr. at 1826:6-1828:10. This to conflict 10 with Steves' more subjective have needed to reimburse Steves for doorskins that were not of a quality satisfactory to Steves because those doorskins would not have met all four elements of JELD-WEN's "Specifications." JELD-WEN'S meaning of essentially second argument, "Specifications" asks the jury however, a to moot infer makes point. that the proper Steves' JELD-WEN claim failed to reimburse Steves for $411,458 worth of doorskins with aesthetic defects based on the following general facts; (1) the quality of JELD-WEN's doorskins declined at some point after the 2012 Merger; (2) Steves' employees inspected the doorskins closely before preparing VDMs and submitting them to JELD-WEN; and (3) JELD-WEN consciously changed its course of performance under the Supply Agreement when Kirk Hachigian ("Hachigian") became JELD- WEN's CEO in 2014, insisting on pre-reimbursement inspections where before particular it had doorskins accepted were not Steves' of representations satisfactory quality. that These circumstances, Steves argues, were sufficient to permit the jury to decide doorskins that that Steves JELD-WEN had could correctly not identified refuse to defective reimburse, even after inspection and verification. understanding of the phrase "satisfactory to Steves," but the jury could have weighed the evidence and interpreted the phrase based on which evidence it found persuasive. 11 Yet this inferential chain is undermined by trial evidence casting doubt on Steves' assessment of doorskin defects. Relying on circumstantial direct evidence damages figure evidence about is about the not the specific inherently VDM VDMs process instead supporting problematic; of Tucker's judgment as a matter of law may not be granted if the evidence puts a jury's inferences "^within the range of reasonable probability.'" Bennett v. CSX Transp., Inc., 552 F. App'x 222, 226 (4th Cir. 2014) (quoting Lovelace v. Sherwin-Williams Co., 681 F.2d 230, 241 (4th inference Cir. 1982)). [cannot be] At so the same tenuous time, that it "^the rests necessary merely upon speculation and conjecture.'" Id. (quoting Lovelace, 681 F.2d at 241). Here, the inference proposed by Steves was that the VDMs for unreimbursed doorskins (that Tucker reviewed) actually contained genuine defects and thus they were improperly rejected for reimbursement after inspection. that inference. However, that The jury obviously drew inference was based on an unstable foundation. Whatever the detail involved in Steves' VDM process, the Supply Agreement preserves the possibility that JELD-WEN may refuse to reimburse Steves for defective doorskins "after notice, inspection and verification of the Defective Product." Supply Agm't § 8; see also Feb. 3 Trial Tr. at 776:25- 777:4. Thus, general evidence about the VDM process would only suffice to support this claim if that evidence showed that the 12 procedure conceded reliably identified that Steves defective sometimes deerskins. submitted claims Yet Gartner for an entire pallet of deerskins where only some were actually determined to be defective, making it possible that some deerskins were wrongly claimed as defective. Feb. 2 Trial Tr. at 544:13-545:9. Similarly, deerskins Steves' for internal which Steves documents had sent suggest VDMs to that some JELD-WEN were determined to be usable after JELD-WEN inspected them. See ECF Nos. 1114-7, 1114-8. There is no doubt that the VDMs upon which Tucker based his actual defects, calculation but this might evidence pertain creates to deerskins serious with doubt as to the probability, or the extent, of such defects. Accordingly, the ''mere possibility" that JELD-WEN failed to reimburse Steves for defective inference in deerskins that is regard. not See enough to Bennett, sustain 552 F. the App'x jury's at 226 (quoting Lovelace, 681 F.2d at 241). Furthermore, JELD-WEN's changed course of perfoirmance does not make because course the the of existence evidence does performance testimony about of actual not under JELD-WEN's defects show the that Supply any more JELD-WEN altered Agreement. practically reflexive probable its Gartner's reimbursement of Steves' VDMs related to the period between 2010 and 2011, well before During that the Supply period, the Agreement parties 13 was executed performed in under a May 2012. different contract with a separate doorskin quality provision. See ECF No. 1192-3, § 8. Edward Steves' testimony also seems to pertain to the period before the 2012 Merger, and his testimony does not suffice to establish a course of performance under Section 8 during the short time between the execution of the Supply Agreement and the closing of the 2012 Merger in October 2012. See Summary Judgment Op. at 5. Accordingly, neither Gartner's nor Edward JELD-WEN Steves' changed statements its support doorskin Steves' reimbursement assertion that approach when Hachigian took over JELD-WEN. Moreover, viewing JELD-WEN's doorskin inspection process as a changed course of performance instead of as an exercise of its contractual right would render the inspection clause in Section 8 mostly impotent. It would make little sense for JELD-WEN to inspect doorskins with claimed defects if Steves' VDM process was always to be accepted without challenge. Viewing the evidence in the way that Steves suggests thus produces a result that is contrary to a core principle of Delaware contract law. See O'Brien v. Progressive N. Ins. Co., 785 A.2d 281, 287 (Del. 2001) ("Contracts are to be interpreted in a way that does not render any provisions illusory or meaningless." (internal quotations omitted)). As a result, Steves' argument cannot be credited. 14 For these reasons, Steves did not present sufficient evidence to allow the jury to infer that JELD-WEN wrongfully failed to reimburse Steves for $411,458 because of defective doorskins. Therefore, judgment as a matter of law on COUNT TWO will be granted to the extent that the claim is based on that theory and paragraphs 8 and 9 of the verdict will be vacated. III. Failure to Reimburse for Cost of Doors That Incorporated Defective Doorskins Gartner also provided the bulk of the testimony about reimbursement from JELD-WEN for Steves' doors that incorporated defective visually doorskins. inspected As discussed doorskins for above, defects Steves in the employees course of assembling a door. However, defective doorskins were included in finished doors that Steves sold to its customers, in some cases because the defects could not be identified until after the door is manufactured. Feb. 2 Trial Tr. at 536:17-537:12. When a customer rejected a door as defective, a Steves sales manager completed a field inspection report {"FIR") with the door description, the identifier number, and the specific defect. Id. at 535:11-20. If Steves determined that the door had a defect, the customer price of the received door. a credit from Id. at Steves for 535:20-23, the purchase 537:13-15. Although customers sometimes returned the defective doors to Steves, they were most often disposed of by the customers themselves because 15 of the shipping cost of returning the doors to Steves. Id. at 538:15-539:7. Sam Steves generally confirmed these details. See Jan. 29 Trial Tr. (ECF No. 1027) at 346:15-347:2. According to Gartner, in 2010 and 2011, Steves sought reimbursement from JELD-WEN for the full cost of the doors with defective doorskins—i.e., the sale price that Steves refunded to the customers—because JELD-WEN would typically pay that entire amount.^ In those situations, Steves would submit a VDM for the defective door to JELD-WEN, just as it did with the defective doorskins. Feb. that practice this 2 Trial Tr. at continued 537:16-25. after the Sam Steves testified Supply Agreement took effect. For example, he described a VDM submitted to JELD-WEN in June 2013 for doors with defective doorskins, which led to credits by JELD-WEN for the full sale prices of the doors. See Jan. 29 Trial Tr. at 349:2-350:2; ECF No. 1149-1. Gartner also testified JELD-WEN customer, that Steves in 2014 REEB, for for sought a substantial reimbursement from the full doors amount with that defective Steves refunded doorskins. one JELD-WEN only paid ''a small portion" of that claim. Feb. 2 Trial Tr. at 533:21-535:10; see also ECF No. 1149-2. ^ Fancher explained that JELD-WEN "never [had] a policy . . . to pay on doors," but did so "[a]s goodwill." Feb. 9 Trial Tr. at 1809:21-1810:4. 16 However, according to Sam Steves, JELD-WEN adopted a policy in 2015 to reimburse Steves for the defective doorskins only, rather than the full cost of the doors. Thus, even "[i]f one skin causes an entire door to fail, [JELD-WEN] will only credit for one skin." Jan. 29 Trial Tr. at 350:3-23. JELD-WEN apparently told Steves that "[t]here was a specific change in their [door reimbursement] doors with defective policy," which applied doorskins were sold to whether the customers or remained in Steves' manufacturing plant. Id. at 351:3-23. This shift followed direction" from what Fancher JELD-WEN's characterized management to as a "tighten" "general its door reimbursement process. Feb. 9 Trial Tr. at 1810:5-22. Indeed, e- mails between JELD-WEN employees in late 2014 and early 2015 stated that JELD-WEN, largely at Hachigian's instruction, had to "take a very hard line" and "get tough" on all claims; require "complete data [and] photos" before paying claims on doors, ECF No. 1149-4; and avoid the "full refund[s]" that JELD-WEN had previously given to Steves. ECF No. 1149-5. After JELD-WEN started taking that approach, Steves decided in early 2015 to stop submitting VDMs to JELD-WEN for doors with defective doorskins. Feb. 2 Trial Tr. at 538:1-4. Gartner explained that giving JELD-WEN the opportunity to inspect the doors with predicate defective to doorskins, reimbursement, was 17 which JELD-WEN financially required impractical as a for Steves. The cost of the customer's refund plus return shipping for the door far outweighed the potential reimbursement from JELD-WEN: ''If a door sells for [$] 25 to $125, and we're able to get five or $6 back on a skin, it doesn't pay to pay maybe [$]500 to $1,000 in freight to bring that product back." Id. at 538:5-10. As with the defective doorskins claim, the jury's award of $1,776,813 damages for unreimbursed figure. See Feb. doors was identical Trial Tr. at 7 and VDMs from 2014 to 2017 for Tucker's 1200:22-25. calculated those damages by reviewing a database FIRs to doors Tucker with Steves' with defective doorskins, subtracting the small amount reimbursed by JELD-WEN for the REEB doors claim® from the total cost to Steves of making those defective doors. Id. at 1200:8-1201:13. He did not testify about the particular defects identified in the FIRs and VDMs that he reviewed. JELD-WEN asserts that judgment as a matter of law should be granted because, proven: (1) that considering the Supply this evidence, Agreement Steves required has JELD-WEN not to reimburse Steves for the cost of doors with defective doorskins; or (2) that, even if some obligation existed, JELD-WEN breached ® Steves did not reimburse the cost of doors beyond the doorskin prices for any doors from 2015 to 2017. Feb. 7 Trial Tr. at 1201:9-13. 18 it with respect to the unreimbursed doors used in Tucker's calculation. These arguments are addressed in turn below. A. Existence of Contractual Obligation Whether Steves should defective doorskins have depends been reimbursed for on the doors effectiveness with of the additional costs provision in Section 8 of the Supply Agreement. Under that provision, [a]ny additional costs over the price of the Defective Product shall be negotiated by [Steves and JELD- WEN] on a case by case basis." Supply Agm't § 8. Edward Steves acknowledged that this clause gives JELD-WEN ''the right to not pay [Steves], if that's [JELD-WEN's] position." Feb. 3 Trial Tr. at 779:10-11. Consequently, if the provision is valid, the jury could not award damages for the full cost of the doors because JELD-WEN was not required by Section 8 to reimburse Steves for anything more than the price of defective doorskins, and thus that JELD-WEN's failure to do so was not a breach of contract. Delaware law clearly permits damages limitations like the provision in question. The Delaware Code notes that "the effect of provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code may be varied by agreement." Del. Code tit. 6, § 1-302(a). Moreover, an agreement "may provide for remedies in addition to or in substitution for those provided in this Article [concerning contract damages] and may limit or alter the measure of damages recoverable under this Article." Id. § 2-719(1)(a). The additional costs provision in 19 the Supply Agreement operates as a restriction on the damages available to Steves, effectively protecting JELD-WEN from liability for costs beyond the price of defective doorskins. Section 2-719 ''fail[s] of allows its the limitation in Section purpose" or is essential 8 unless it ''unconscionable." Id. § 2-719(2)-(3). Steves does not argue that the provision is unconscionable. Instead, Steves contends that the limitation fails of its essential purpose because the doorskins that were incorporated into doors contained latent defects that Steves could not have discovered during a reasonable inspection. In support of this argument, Steves points to Crowell Corp. v. Himont U.S.A., No. 86C-11-125-JEB, Sept. 4, 1996 Del. 1996), in Super. which a LEXIS 400 contract (Del. Super. provision Ct. limited plaintiff's damages to the purchase price of a laminate sold by defendant that plaintiff used in its sealing tape (which was in turn used by plaintiff to manufacture cardboard cartons). See id. at *1, *3-4. The court found that the laminate contained a latent defect, which became apparent when the tape began to delaminate after it was manufactured. Id. at *4-5. As a result, the damages limitation failed of its essential purpose because the defect "presented changed circumstances" between the parties and, more importantly, "operated to deprive [plaintiff] of the substantial value of its bargain" 20 given the substantial additional expenses caused by the defect. Id. at *9. Here, apparently relying solely on Gartner's testimony, Steves asserts that the doorskin defects that led customers to reject doors were latent because they could not have been discovered through Steves' inspection during the skin-flipping process. Thus, says Steves, here, as in Crowell, the doorskin defects deprived Steves of the value of its bargain with JELD-WEN because it was forced to incur unexpected losses by refunding customers for the purchase price of full doors, which are exponentially higher than doorskin prices. Therefore, in Steves' view, JELD-WEN must pay any consequential and incidental damages that flow from the latent defects, see Del. Code tit. 6, §§ 2-714, 2-715, which would include the cost of doors that JELD-WEN knew Steves would use the doorskins to manufacture. This argument is appealing in theory but is unsupported by the evidence at trial. noted that contractual Numerous courts other than Crowell have limitations of remedy to the purchase price of defective goods alone fail of their essential purpose if those goods contain latent defects. See, e.g.. Viking Yacht Co. V. Composite One LLC, 385 F. App'x 195, 208 (3d Cir. 2010) ( '[W]hen goods have latent defects which are not discoverable upon receipt and reasonable inspection, a limitation of remedy to return purpose.'" of the purchase (alteration in price fails original) 21 of its (quoting essential Fiberglass Component Prod., Inc. v. Reichhold Chems., Inc., 983 F. Supp. 948, 960 (D. Colo. 1997))); Lutz Farms v. Asgrow Seed Co., 948 F.2d 638, 646 (10th Cir. 1991) ("^ [0]ne situation in which a limitation of remedy to return of the purchase price has been held to fail of its essential purpose is when goods have latent defects which are not discoverable upon receipt and reasonable inspection . . . V. (alteration in original) (quoting Leprino Intermountain 1988))). issue But is Brick that clearly Co., situation latent. 759 P.2d only In 835, arises 837 where Crowell, for (Colo. the App. defect instance, at trial evidence established that the defect in the laminate was caused by "a sudden application shift in viscosity temperature," discovered by reasonable Super. LEXIS at *4-5. and at thus temperatures could not below have the been inspection or observation. 1996 Del. Here, in contrast, the only evidence concerning latent doorskin defects is Gartner's statement that ''[sjome through defective the plant doorskins where literally they're going can't to be manifest identified themselves with the problem once they're in the field," followed by a brief discussion of Trial at Tr. Fancher, those Sam moisture 536:21-537:12. Steves, moisture content Edward issues No an example. witnesses—including Steves, content problems as and affected Tucker—stated the Feb. 2 Gartner, whether particular doors for which Steves issued refunds to customers and is now seeking 22 damages. Nor did any of those witnesses testify about the particular defects associated with each door. The doors may have been inadequate because of latent doorskin defects, but it is equally possible that the defects in those doors were defects that Steves' skin-flippers could (and should) have noticed. The record provides no evidence that the jury could have used to decide between these alternatives.^ Consequently, the record does not establish that the additional costs limitation in Section 8 fails of its essential purpose. Alternatively, course of Steves performance reimbursing Steves for contends, under the JELD-WEN Section 8 full cost of committed by doors to a consistently with defective doorskins, essentially rendering the additional costs provision meaningless. A course transaction exists of if: performance 'MD [t]he between parties agreement to of a the parties . . . involves repeated occasions for perfomance by a party; and (2) [t]he other party, with knowledge of the nature of the performance and opportunity for objection to it, accepts the performance Code tit. 6, § or acquiesces 1-303(a). in it Citing without Gartner's objection." Del. and Sam Steves' ^ In fact, Gartner also testified—in the same answer quoted above—that defects that could not be discerned through visual inspection were only [o]ccasional[]." Feb. 2 Trial Tr. at 536:19. This Statement suggests that few, if any, of the doors involved in these claims actually defects. 23 had doorskins with latent testimony about JELD-WEN's ^^practice" of reimbursing Steves for the full costs of doors with defective doorskins without inspection by JELD-WEN, Steves argues that JELD-WEN's conduct constituted a course of performance from which JELD-WEN could not deviate, no matter what Section 8 says. This assertion is flawed in two respects. First, the record that purportedly shows a course of performance does not satisfy both elements of Section 1-303(a). Based on the clear language of Section 8, and the Supply Agreement in general, it seems clear that the Supply Agreement contemplates ''repeated occasions for performance" by JELD-WEN, id. § 1-303(a)(1)—both by supplying doorskins, and by reimbursing Steves for at least the cost of doorskins where they do not meet a certain quality. So the first part of § 1-303(d) is satisfied. However, motivation the record underlying sheds JELD-WEN's very little earlier light on the reimbursement of the full door costs, or how it understood those actions with respect to the additional costs provision. JELD-WEN might have believed— as Steves suggests—that the provision effectively required JELD- WEN to negotiate reimbursement for the door costs in every situation, or it might simply have been negotiating "on a case by case basis" as Section 8 demands, deciding more often than not that full information reimbursement about the was justified. frequency 24 and The context paucity of of door reimbursements, aside from Gartner's and Sam Steves' general statements, makes it difficult to distinguish between the two options here. Thus, Steves' assertions about course of performance rest on a weak foundation. Second, and more problematic for Steves, the clear meaning of the additional costs provision makes any JELD-WEN course of performance irrelevant. ''If a contract is unambiguous, extrinsic evidence may not be used to interpret the intent of the parties, to vary the terms of the contract or to create an ambiguity."® Eagle Indus., Inc. v. DeVilbiss Health Care, Inc., 702 A.2d 1228, 1232 (Del. 1997). And, a contract is ambiguous only when the provisions in controversy are reasonably or fairly susceptible of different interpretations or may have two or more different meanings. Ambiguity does not exist where the court can determine the meaning of a contract without any other guide than a ® In some cases, extrinsic evidence about course of performance may help reveal a latent ambiguity, which exists when contractual language that is unambiguous on its face becomes ambiguous when applied. Motors Liquidation Co., Dip Lenders Tr. V. Allianz Ins. Co., No. CVN11C12022FSSCCLD, 2013 WL 7095859, at *4 (Del. Super. Ct. Dec. 31, 2013). But no apparent latent ambiguities exist here, and neither party has suggested one. In addition, a course of performance may be "relevant to show a waiver or modification of any term inconsistent with the course of performance." Del. Code tit. 6, § 1-303(f). However, Steves has never argued that JELD-WEN waived its right to negotiate additional costs on a case by case basis. Even if Steves had, the record contains minimal evidence to allow the Court to evaluate whether JELD-WEN's performance was inconsistent with the additional costs provision. Thus, these possible uses for course of performance evidence are inapplicable here. 25 knowledge of the simple facts on which, from the nature of language in general, its meaning depends. Rhone-Poulenc Basic Chems. Co. v. Am. Motorists Ins. Co., 616 A.2d 1192, 1196 (Del. 1992) (internal citations and quotations omitted). Section Nothing 8 is definitions, marginally about the ambiguous: and the ambiguous additional the parties terms do phrase, costs all not have dispute "additional provision in common-sense that the costs," can only be construed to include door costs. That Steves believes the clause to be ambiguous does not make it so. Given the absence of any uncertainty, JELD-WEN's previous actions with respect to reimbursement for doors with defective doorskins cannot change the plain meaning of the additional costs provision. Accordingly, the Supply Agreement did not obligate JELD-WEN to reimburse Steves in every instance for the refunded price of defective doors that Steves paid to customers, and JELD-WEN could not have breached the contract by failing to do so. In other words, the jury could not properly have awarded damages for a breach of a non-existent obligation. Judgment as a matter of law can, therefore, be granted as to the unreimbursed doors claim on this basis alone. B. JELD-WEN's Breach Even assuming that the Supply Agreement required JELD-WEN to reimburse Steves for the full 26 door costs, there was not enough evidence for the jury to conclude that JELD-WEN breached that obligation. JELD-WEN contends that the evidence does not establish a breach of the additional costs provision for two reasons. First, it asserts that Steves' failure to give JELD-WEN notice of the purported defect and an opportunity to inspect prevented Second, JELD-WEN from performing consistent with Section 8. repeating JELD-WEN unsound those says an that because damages argument Tucker's Steves are regarding has based the calculations not shown had that doorskins doorskins are claim, fundamentally the doors that were on which actually defective. The first argument relies on another part of Section 8 that is discussed in more detail above, must reimburse the cost of which states that JELD-WEN defective doorskins only after ''notice, inspection and verification." As JELD-WEN points out, without the opportunity it cannot verify product, JELD-WEN. doorskins This as it is is to that equally for inspect the true the the allegedly defect is for defective doors defective attributable with doorskins to defective themselves. Moreover, evidence at trial indicated that JELD-WEN was not able to inspect some of the doors included in the REEB claim. And, of course, REEB JELD-WEN doors had after no notice early of 2015, defective given that submitting door reimbursement VDMs to JELD-WEN. 27 doorskins Steves in non- stopped Nonetheless, insunnountable that any Steves' obstacle door lack because reimbursement of the claims notice jury is not considered would have been an evidence futile. Delaware courts have recognized that "the law does not require a futile act." Reserves Development LLC v. R.T Props., L.L.C., No. CIV.A. S07C-11034RFS, 2011 WL 4639817, at *7 (Del. Super. Ct. Sept. 22, 2011) (citing, inter alia, Morgan v. Swain, No. CIV.A. 08A04003 RFS, 2009 WL 3309173, at *4 (Del. Super. Ct. Sept. 17, 2009); State 1997)). v. Steves Hearn, notes 697 A.2d that there 756, was 758 no (Del. Super. Ct. point in making the defective doors available for inspection after a certain date because JELD-WEN, according to Gartner and Sam Steves, had made clear that it would not reimburse Steves for defective doors under any circumstances. E-mails from Fancher and Hachigian that were presented at trial reiterated JELD-WEN's uncompromising stance. Considering this evidence, the facts of this case do not seem so different from those in Reserves Development, where notice of default was not required because it "would not have led to agreement or compromise." 2011 WL 4639817 at *9. To the contrary, the parties here appear to have been similarly unable to resolve their dispute about reimbursing costs beyond the defective doorskins. For that reason, the Court instructed the jury that, to prevail on its defective doors claim, Steves had 28 to prove, among other elements, that it ^^gave notice [of the defective doorskins in the doors] to JELD-WEN and an opportunity to inspect those doors, or . . . that doing so would have been futile. See Jury Instruction, Instruction No. 39 (emphasis added). JELD-WEN's belief that Steves' futility argument merely goes to the amount of reimbursement Steves might receive, not the ability to be reimbursed at all, is irrelevant. The jury had more than enough evidence to assess the strength of Steves' futility argument, and obviously found it compelling. The Court cannot second-guess that determination or weigh the evidence after the fact. As a result, Steves' failure to give notice and an opportunity to inspect cannot subject its defective doors claim to judgment as a matter of law.® Nonetheless, the unreimbursed doors claim suffers from the same problem as the defective doorskins claim: a lack of evidence about the defects affecting the doors. Of those doors that were inspected as part of the REEB claim, JELD-WEN offered evidence that a significant percentage were either not defective to the point where they were unusable, or they had defects that ® This conclusion is not influenced by Steves' brief argument that its lack of notice was excused by JELD-WEN's ''unilateral change in [its] course of performance" under the additional costs provision, which Steves asserts was a breach of the Supply Agreement. Steves Suppl. 0pp. (ECF No. 1149) at 23. As detailed above, JELD-WEN's earlier conduct is immaterial to the proper interpretation of the additional costs provision, and as such, cannot be considered as an independent breach of contract. 29 were caused by Steves. Steves' only response—that its doorskin inspection procedure was commercially reasonable in the absence of any specifications in the Supply Agreement, see Del. Code tit. 6, § 311—is unpersuasive. Steves is free to employ whatever inspection procedure is reasonable, but where that process has such a high rate of error, Steves must put forth more seeks than generalized relate to evidence doors with to prove actual that defects. the damages Tucker's it broad testimony about doors is inadequate in that regard. Moreover, Steves misinterprets the problem when it characterizes the issue as one of certainty in damages estimates. It is clear that there must only "be a sufficient evidentiary basis for making a fair and reasonable estimate of damages, rather than absolute certainty." Vianix Del. LLC v. Nuance Commc'ns, Inc., No. CIV.A. 3801-VCP, 2010 WL 3221898, at *6 (Del. Ch. Aug. 13, 2010) (citing Henne v. Balick, 146 A.2d 394, 396 (Del. 1958)). But, given the record evidence that many doorskins were not defective as defined by Section 8, Steves has not put forth enough other evidence to be seeking damages able to prove that the were probably doors for which it is defective. See Bennett, 552 F. App'x at 226. Consequently, the absence of evidence showing that JELD-WEN doors breached the Supply Agreement as to the unreimbursed provides an additional reason matter of law on that claim. 30 to grant judgment as a As a last resort, Steves claimed for the first time at oral argument that, Agreement by even if failing JELD-WEN to did reimburse not for breach doors the with Supply defective doorskins, it did so by failing to negotiate in good faith pursuant to the additional costs provision. The Complaint allegations cited by Steves do not reference any failure to negotiate. See Compl. (ECF No. 5) KH 118-20, 128-32, 179-82. Undeterred, Steves seeks leave to amend the Complaint to conform to the evidence presented at trial. See Fed. R. Civ. P 15(b)(2). However, Rule impliedly 15(b)(2) consent prejudiced to by doing ^^requires trial on that an a party unpled expressly claim so.'' Dan Ryan Builders, and Inc. v. or not be Crystal Ridge Dev., Inc., 783 F.3d 976, 983 (4th Cir. 2015). Although Edward Steves noted JELD-WEN's refusal to negotiate, Feb. 3 Trial Tr. at 779:4-6 ("[T]hey also didn't negotiate. . . . [T]he contract says you shall be negotiated by the parties on a case- by-case basis. And that did not happen."), more is needed to show JELD-WEN's implied consent to trial on an unpled claim than failing to object to a single remark. See Dan Ryan Builders, 783 F.3d at 983 ("[A party]'s single reference to a breach of the slope fill constitute contract consent."); in its Feldman pre-trial v. Pro memorandum Football, does Inc., 419 not F. App'x 381, 390 (4th Cir. 2011) ("[A]lthough a party's failure to object to evidence regarding an unpleaded issue may be evidence 31 of implied consent to trial of an issue, it must appear that the party understood unpleaded issue." the evidence (internal was introduced quotation marks to prove the omitted)). The Feldman predicate is not present here. As a result, there is no justification for Steves to conform its Complaint to include this unpled claim, and Steves cannot rely on the refusal to negotiate claim to somehow save its damages for the unreimbursed doors claim. For the foregoing reasons, Steves' claim for damages in the amount of $1,776,813 because of JELD-WEN's failure to reimburse for the cost of doors that incorporated defective doorskins fails as a matter of law. CONCLUSION For the foregoing reasons, and to the extent set out above, JELD-WEN, INC.'S MOTION FOR JUDGMENT AS A MATTER OF LAW AGAINST STEVES & SONS, INC. (ECF No. 968) will be granted and, the verdict on COUNT TWO, paragraphs 8 through 11, will be set aside and vacated. It is so ORDERED. /s/ Robert E. Payne Senior United States District Judge Richmond, Virginia Date: September 2018 32

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