Silverpop Systems, Inc. v. Leading Market Technologies, Inc. , 641 F. App'x 849 ( 2016 )


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  •           Case: 14-14258   Date Filed: 01/05/2016   Page: 1 of 15
    [DO NOT PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 14-14258
    Non-Argument Calendar
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 1:12-cv-02513-SCJ
    SILVERPOP SYSTEMS, INC.,
    Plaintiff – Counter Defendant – Appellee,
    versus
    LEADING MARKET TECHNOLOGIES, INC.,
    Defendant – Counter Claimant – Appellant.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Georgia
    ________________________
    (January 5, 2016)
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    Before TJOFLAT and MARTIN, Circuit Judges, and ROSENTHAL, ∗ District
    Judge.
    PER CURIAM:
    We AFFIRM the District Court’s well-reasoned and thorough decision for
    the reasons stated in the Court’s order of February 14, 2014. A copy of that order
    is attached below.
    AFFIRMED.
    ∗
    The Honorable Lee H. Rosenthal, U.S. District Judge for the Southern District of Texas, sitting
    by designation.
    2
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    APPENDIXt
    ORDER
    This matter is before the Court on Plaintiff's motions to compel discovery
    [Doc. Nos. 45 and 47},l motion for summary judgment [Doc. No. 53], and motions
    in limine [Doe. No. 65 and 661,2 and Defendant's motion for partial summary
    judgment [Doe. No. 52].
    I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    Plaintiff Silverpop Systems, Inc. ("Silverpop") provides digital marketing
    services to businesses such as Defendant Leading Market Technologies, Inc.
    ("LMT"). On January 24, 2005, Silverpop and LMT entered into a service
    agreement whereby LMT was authorized to access Silverpop's web-based e-mail
    marketing tool (Engage). In accordance with the terms of the agreement, LMT
    would upload digital advertising content and recipient e-mail addresses to the
    Engage system. That advertising content would then be transmitted to the e-mail
    addresses provided. The list of e-mail addresses provided by LMT was stored on
    the Engage system. LMT's master e-mail address list was comprised of the e-mail
    address of every person to have ever registered for its MarketBrowser software.
    LMT would upload select e-mail addresses from its master list to the Engage
    system. As a result, as of November 2010, Silverpop had in its possession a list
    containing the e-mail addresses of 495,591 users of LMT's MarketBrower
    software ("LMT List").
    In November 2010, Silverpop's computer network experienced an
    unauthorized intrusion by unidentified parties ("hackers") who gained access to the
    information stored on the Engage system by 110 of Silverpop's 1,500
    customers("data breach"). LMT was one of the customers affected by the data
    breach. According to Silverpop, although it was apparent that the hackers had
    created export files, it could not be confirmed that the export files were taken out
    The District Court's Order of February 14, 2014, is reproduced here in relevant part. Only the formatting and
    numbering have been changed.
    Following the filing of the motions to compel, the parties represented lo the Court their intent to resolve the
    underlying discovery dispute without the need for Court action. Relying on that representation and in the absence of
    an indication that the parties' discovery dispute remains unresolved, the motions to compel are DISMISSED AS
    MOOT.
    2
    Plaintiff's second motion in limine Doc, No. 66J is incorrectly identified as such. It is in fact the memorandum in
    support of the contemporaneously filed motion in liminc [Doe. No. 651. Plaintiff is notified that it is unnecessary to
    tile a motion and its supporting memorandum as separale docket entries. Here, there is only one motion in limine
    pending before the Court [Doc. No. 65J, but, for the purposes of docket clarity and consistency, the Court lists both
    docket entries as representing the motion in limine.
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    The parties agree ment does not provide for a suspension of the contract.
    '
    On December 1,2010, an amended version of Rule 56 of the Federal Rules olCivil Procedure became effective,
    The amendments to Rule 56 "are intended to improve the procedures for presenting and deciding summary-
    judgment motions" and "arc not intended to change the summary-judgment standard or burdens." Farmers Ins.
    Exchange t'. RNK. Inc., 
    632 F.3d 777
    , 782 n.4 (1st Cir. 2011) (internal quotation marks and emphasis omitied).
    "IBlecause the summary judgment standard remains the same, the amendments will not affect continuing
    development of the decisional law construing and applying the standard now articulated in Rule 56(a). Accordingly,
    while the Court is bound to apply the new version of Rule 56, the undersigned will, where appropriate, continue to
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    cite to decisional law construing and applying prior versions of the Rule." Murray i', Ingram, No. 3: 10-C V-348-
    MEF, 201 
    1 WL 671604
    , *2 (M.D. Ala. Feb. 3, 2011) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    3
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    2.     LMT'S COUNTERCLAIM FOR NEGLIGENCE
    To prevail on a claim for negligence under Georgia law, the plaintiff must
    establish
    (1) A legal duty to conform to a standard of conduct raised by the law
    for the protection of others against unreasonable risks of harm; (2) a
    breach of this standard; (3) a legally attributable causal connection
    between the conduct and the resulting injury; and, (4) some loss or
    damage flowing to the plaintiffs legally protected interest as a result
    of the alleged breach of the legal duty.
    Watson v. Gen. Mech. Servs., Inc., 
    276 Ga. App. 479
    , 481, 
    623 S.E.2d 679
    , 681
    (2005) (quoting Bradley Ctr., Inc. v. Wessner, 
    250 Ga. 199
    , 200, 
    296 S.E.2d 693
    ,
    695 (1982)). Here, assuming, arguendo, that Silverpop had a duty to conform its
    conduct to a particular standard to protect against incidents resulting in a data
    breach, LMT has failed to present evidence to establish the applicable standard of
    care. "Evidence of custom within a particular industry, group, or organization is
    admissible as bearing on the standard of care in determining negligence." Muncie
    Aviatio,z Corp. v. Party Doll Fleet, Inc., 
    519 F.2d 1178
    , 1180 (5th Cir. 1975).
    Silverpop contends that LMT's expert has not proposed any standards that are
    ordinarily employed in Silverpop's industry, and LMT fails to rebut this
    contention. Overall, while LMT highlights several deficiencies in Silverpop's
    intrusion detection system, it offers no evidence to establish how Silverpop's
    practices, as they related to intrusion detection, failed to meet the applicable
    standard of care. Accordingly, as LMT has failed to present evidence establishing
    the standard of care that governed Silverpop's actions, it cannot establish a breach
    of the standard of care.
    Alternatively, LMT's negligence claim is barred by the economic loss rule.
    The rule "generally provides that a contracting party who suffers purely economic
    losses must seek his remedy in contract and not in tort." Gen. Elec. Co. v. Lowe's
    Home 2enters, Inc., 
    279 Ga. 77
    , 78, 
    608 S.E.2d 636
    , 637 (2005). However, the
    economic loss rule does not prevent the recover in tort of "those economic losses
    resulting from injury to [a plaintiff's] person or damage to his property." 
    Id.
    "[B]oth the Georgia Supreme Court and [the Georgia Court of Appeals] have
    applied the economic loss rule outside of product liability cases." City of Atlanta
    v. Benator, 
    310 Ga. App. 597
    , 605, 
    714 S.E.2d 109
    , 116 (2011).
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    Here, the parties disagree over whether the economic loss doctrine to this
    case applies to bar LMT's recovery under its claim of negligence. Silverpop
    argues that the issue here is whether it adequately performed the contract and thus
    an action for recovery here may be brought only in contract and not in tort. LMT
    contends that the economic loss rule does not prevent its recovery in tort because it
    is seeking to recover for damages to its property (the LMT List) that was not the
    subject of the service agreement between the parties. According to LMT, the LMT
    List was property outside of the subject of the contract and the List lost all value as
    a saleable asset because no reasonable business would buy a list which had been
    the subject of a data breach.
    Where a party to a contract suffers damage to property that is not the subject
    of the contract, Georgia courts allow for recovery in tort on the premise that "the
    duty breached in such situations generally arises independent of the contract."
    Bates & Associates, inc. v. Romei, 
    207 Ga. App. 81
    , 83, 426 S.E2d 919, 921
    (1993); see also Voting v. W.S. Badcock Corp., 
    222 Ga. App. 218
    ,474 S.E2d 87,
    89 (1996) (quoting Uizfied Svcs. v. Home ins. c's., 
    218 Ga. App. 85
    , 87(4), 
    460 S.E.2d 545
     (1995)) ("[A] tort action cannot be based on the breach of a contractual
    duty only, [but] it can be based on conduct which, in addition to breaching a duty
    imposed by contract, also breaches a duty imposed by law."); Flintkote Co. v.
    Dravo Corp., 
    678 F.2d 942
    , 948 (11th Cir. 1982) ("The [economic loss] rule acts
    as a shorthand means of determining whether a plaintiff is suing for injuries arising
    from the breach of a contractual duty. . . or whether the plaintiff seeks to recover
    for injuries resulting from the breach of the duty arising independently of the
    contract. . . .).
    The bar presented by the economic loss rule cannot be circumvented here
    because the duty at issue is one arising under the contract itself. LMT contends
    that its list represented confidential information and Silverpop's duty to protect
    against the disclosure of the LMT List arose from the fact that it "agreed to accept,
    store, and safeguard" the LMT List [Doc. No. 68, 23]. However, assuming that the
    LMT List contained confidential information, Silverpop's duty to protect the LMT
    List arose under Section 4.1 of the parties' agreement, wherein it agreed to protect
    against the disclosure of proprietary information (defined as "confidential
    information" under the agreement [Doc. No. 1-1, p.7]).5 LMT identifies no other
    Section 4.1 provides:
    Each party hereunder may disclose to the other party certain Proprietary Information of such party
    - . - . Recipient agrees to hold the Proprietary Information disclosed by Owner in strictest
    confidence and not to, directly or indirectly.. . disclose, cause to be disclosed, or otherwise
    transfer the Proprietary Information disclosed by Owner 10 any third party...
    [Doc.No. 1-I, p.4].
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    source for Silverpop's duty to safeguard the LMT List. Thus, to recover its
    damages LMT must proceed under the contract.
    LMT also argues that the accident and the misrepresentation exceptions to
    the economic loss rule apply to its claim of negligence. The accident exception
    "allows a plaintiff to recover in tort when there is a sudden and calamitous event
    that not only causes damage to the product but poses an unreasonable risk of injury
    to persons and other property." Advanced Drainage Sys., hzc. v. Lowinan, 
    210 Ga. App. 731
    , 734, 
    437 S.E.2d 604
    , 607 (1993). According to LMT, the incident
    resulting in the data breach was a sudden and calamitous event that caused damage
    to its property. LMT cites no authority that supports the application of the accident
    exception outside the realms of a product liability action, much less to this case.
    Under the accident exception, a plaintiff may "recover for damages to the
    defective product itself, where the injury resulted from an accident." Flinticote Co.,
    
    678 F.2d at 948
    . Here, the parties' agreement encompassed a service and not a
    product. But even if the Engage system was considered a "product" that LMT had
    the rights to access under the agreement, the accident exception does not apply
    because LMT does not seek to recover for any damage suffered by the "product
    itself." Moreover, LMT offers no explanation as to why the data breach incident
    constitutes "a calamity, sudden violence, collision with another object, or some
    catastrophic event," justifying the application of the accident exception. Busbee v.
    Chrysler Corp., 
    240 Ga. App. 664
    , 666, 524 S,E.2d 539, 542 (1999). Thus, there
    is no basis to apply the accident exception here.
    LMT's recourse to the misrepresentation exception is also unavailing. The
    misrepresentation exception to the application of the economic loss rule recognizes
    that
    one who supplies information . . . in any transaction in which he has a
    pecuniary interest has a duty of reasonable care and competence to
    parties who rely upon the information in circumstances in which the
    maker was manifestly aware of the use to which the information was
    to be put and intended that it be so used.
    Advanced Drainage Sys., Inc. v. Low,na,z, 
    210 Ga. App. 731
    , 734,
    437 S.E.2d 604
    ,
    607 (1993) (quoting Robert & Co. Assoc. v. Rhodes-Haveriy Partnership, 
    250 Ga. 680
    ,681-682, 
    300 S.E.2d 503
     (1983). Here, LMT has conceded its fraud claim and
    its Counterclaim provides no allegations of misrepresentation with regard to its
    cause of action for negligence. In the fashion of a shotgun pleading, the count of
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    negligence in the Counterclaim indiscriminately incorporates by reference all of
    the preceding allegations (including allegations of misrepresentation alleged in
    support of the claim for fraud). But the sole stated basis for the negligence claim is
    Silverpop's failure to protect against the data breach [Doc. No. 4, p.13, ¶17].
    Accordingly, the misrepresentation exception does not apply to LMT's negligence
    claim. See Home Depot U.S.A., Inc. v. Wabash Nat. Corp., 
    314 Ga. App. 360
    , 366,
    
    724 S.E.2d 53
    , 59 (2012) (concluding that while "fraud and negligent
    misrepresentation claims.. . fell within the misrepresentation exception" to the
    economic loss rule a claim based on any other tort would have to be encompassed
    by another exception to the rule to survive dismissal); City of Cairo v. Hightower
    Consulting Engineers, Inc., 
    278 Ga. App. 721
    , 729, 
    629 S.E.2d 518
    , 525 (2006)
    (concluding that the misrepresentation exception to the economic loss rule applied
    because the plaintiff had asserted a clam for negligent misrepresentation).
    Overall, Silverpop is entitled to summary judgement on LMT's claim of
    negligence because LMT has failed to establish the applicable standard of care and
    the breach of that standard and, alternatively, because the economic loss rule
    applies to bar LMT's recovery in tort.
    3. LMT'S COUNTERCLAIM FOR BREACH OF CONTRACT6
    Each of the parties seeks summary judgment in its favor on LMT's breach of
    contract claim. According to LMT, it is entitled to summary judgment because
    Silverpop breached Section 4.1 of the parties' agreement by failing to protect the
    LMT List from disclosure to third parties, the damages it incurred as a result of the
    breach were direct rather than consequential and, thus, recoverable under the
    contract, and even if those damages were consequential, its recovery is not barred
    under the damages limitation provision of the contract. Silverpop, on the other
    hand, argues that it is entitled to summary judgment on LMT's claim of breach of
    contract because LMT cannot prove its damages, cannot establish that its damages
    were caused by Silverpop's alleged breach of the contract, and cannot recover the
    damages it seeks because they are consequential damages and the contract bars the
    recovery of such damages.
    In analyzing the cross motions for summary judgment on LMT's breach of
    contract claim, the Court first addresses whether the damages LMT seeks are
    consequential rather than direct. It is important here to categorize the damages
    sought as either consequential or direct because while the parties' agreement does
    In accordance with the choice of law provision, parties' agreement is governed by Georgia law [Doc. No. I, Ex.
    A,111 1.3].
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    not prohibit the recovery of direct damages, the damages limitation provision of
    the agreement, to the extent it is applicable, prohibits the recovery of consequential
    damages.
    LMT seeks to recoup the lost sale value of its list. It argues that Silverpop
    was bound under the contract to protect the LMT List from disclosure to third
    parties. According to LMT, Silverpop did not have in place adequate security
    measures to protect against the November 2010 data breach and, as a result, an
    unauthorized third party was able to access the LMT List. LMT contends that its
    list, as it existed before the data breach, had a certain value as an asset that could
    be sold but that its sale value was reduced to zero after the data breach. According
    to LMT, no reasonable business would purchase the LMT List for marketing
    purposes once it had been accessed (and very likely exported) by a hacker.7
    Assuming, arguendo, that the sale value of the LMT List, as it existed prior to the
    data breach, was reduced to zero following that breach and that the LMT List was
    a confidential document that Silverpop was required to protect from disclosure
    under Section 4.1 of the parties' agreement, the question that must be answered is
    which of the two categories of damages (direct or consequential) does the loss of
    sale value fall under.
    "The general rule applicable here is that damages recoverable for a breach of
    contract are such as arise naturally and according to the usual course of things from
    such breach [i.e., general damages] and such as the parties contemplated, when the
    contract was made, as the probable result of its breach [i.e., consequential
    damages]." Denny v. Nutt, 
    189 Ga. App. 387
    , 388, 
    375 S.E.2d 878
    , 879 (1988)
    (internal quotation marks omitted) (alternations in original). So stated, however,
    the rule does little to further one's understanding of the type of damages that may
    "arise naturally from the contract" as opposed to the type that may be the
    "probable result of the breach." The Court finds it helpful to consider general (i.e.,
    direct) damages as those damages that compensate for "the value of the very
    performance promised" and consequential damages as those damages that "seek to
    compensate a plaintiff for additional losses (other than the value of the promised
    performance) that are incurred as a result of the defendant's breach." Schonfeld v.
    Hi/hard, 
    218 F.3d 164
    , 175-76 (2d Cir. 2000) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    See also Imaging Sys. Int'l, Inc. v. Magnetic Resonance Plus, Inc., 227 Ga. App.
    LMT theorizes that once in the hands of a hacker, the LMT List could he sold to any number of parties, which
    would reduce its exclusivity, and the c-mail addresses on the LMT List would be at the risk of spam attacks, which
    would make the address owners more wary about marketing c-mails even if sent by a business that had acquired the
    address through legitimate means (e.g.. by purchasing the List from LMT).
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    641, 646,
    490 S.E.2d 124
    , 129 (1997) (direct damages included loss of the benefit
    of the bargain).
    Here, LMT's damages are best characterized as consequential. LMT argues
    that it seeks to recover the lost market value of the LMT List and that lost market
    value is a direct injury rather than consequential damages. The two cases LMT
    cites for the proposition that lost market value represents direct damages are
    inapposite. In NUCO Invs., Inc. v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., No. 1:02 CV 1622 CAP,
    
    2005 WL 3307089
     (N.D. Ga. Dec. 5, 2005), the plaintiff sought to recover under
    an insurance policy the lost market value of a mold-damaged property. This Court
    concluded that a loss in value represented direct damages recoverable under the
    insurance contract based on the understanding that physical damage causes a loss
    in both the utility and the value of property and that the insurer, having agreed to
    pay for physical damage, was bound to pay for the loss in value. The NUCO
    Court's analysis is unhelpful here.8 Here, the parties' agreement was not one for
    the safeguarding of the LMT List. Rather, the parties contracted for the providing
    of e-mail marketing services. While it was necessary for LMT to provide a list of
    intended recipients (represented as e-mail addresses on the LMT List) to ensure
    that the service Silverpop provided (targeted e-mail marketing) was carried out, the
    safe storage of the list was not the purpose of the agreement between the parties.
    Thus, in the face of a breach of the service agreement by Silverpop, LMT would
    incur direct damages in the form of a loss of the value (e.g., the money it had paid
    for the service) of the performance it had been promised. Here, considering the
    nature of the breach, LMT also suffered a loss in the sate value of the LMT List.
    That loss, however, is a loss that is separate from the loss of the value of the
    performance itself. The loss LMT seeks to recover is not of the type that would
    naturally flow from a breach of contract, irrespective of the actual provision
    breached by Silverpop. Rather, the loss suffered by LMT is of a type resulting
    from the breach of a specific term of the agreement. In the absence of a breach of
    the confidentiality provision, LMT would not have incurred the loss to the sale
    value of the LMT List. Thus, considering the purpose of the parties' agreement,
    the damages LMT seeks are not the type that "arise naturally and from the usual
    course of things." LMT's damages are consequential rather than direct.
    Next, the Court addresses whether the damages limitation provision of the
    parties' agreement bars LMT's recovery of its consequential damages.9 Silverpop
    8 LMT's reliance
    on Metro. Atlanta Rapid Transit Auth. r. Dend, 
    250 Ga. 538
    , 
    299 S.E.2d 876
     (1983), is equally
    unavailing. That case concerned the plaintiff's claim for compensation based on the market value ola condemnation
    action.
    Under Georgia law, "[tb the extent that consequential damages are recoverable in breach of contract actions, a
    clause excluding such damages is valid and binding unless prohibited by statute or public policy." Mark Singleton
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    structural (e.g., relating to remedies and the resolution of disputes) may survive
    that termination. Goshawk Dedicated v. Portsmouth Settlement Go. 1, 
    466 F. Supp. 2d 1293
    , 1300 (N.D. Ga. 2006). See also TriState HVAC Equip., LLP v. Big Belly
    Solar, Inc., 
    752 F. Supp. 2d 517
    , 534 (E.D. Pa. 2010) amended on other ground on
    reconsideration, No. 10-1054, 
    2011 WL 204738
     (ED. Pa. Jan. 21, 2011) (rejecting
    the argument that the forum selection did not apply to parties' dispute because it
    was not one of the enumerated provisions that survived the termination of the
    contract).
    LMT argues that a contract is nothing more than a recitation of statements of
    mutual obligations and, in essence, argues that the term "obligations" in the
    survival provision encompass all the terms and provisions included in the
    agreement. Thus, according to LMT, the only provisions that survived the
    termination of the parties' agreement were those specific provisions (Sections 4, 6,
    7, 8, and 9) which were expressly exempted from termination. LMT further argues
    that if "obligations" was intended to be restricted to performance obligations only
    then there would have been no need to selectively exempt certain provisions not
    dealing with performance obligations (i.e., Sections 8 and 9) from termination.
    Adoption of LMT's arguments, however, would lead to an anomalous result.
    For example, the choice of law provision in the agreement (which does not
    represent a performance obligation) would be extinguished. While the agreement
    was in force, the choice of law provision in the agreement would dictate the state
    law to be applied to any suit filed under the agreement, but that choice of law
    provision would no longer govern if the suit was filed over the same incident
    following the agreement's termination. There is no cogent reason why the parties
    would have elected to apply the law of a particular state to a dispute litigated while
    the agreement was in force but have allowed for uncertainty as to the state law that
    would govern any dispute litigated following the termination of the agreement.
    On the other hand, construing the survival clause as limited to the
    performance obligations of the agreement properly gives meaning to the relevant
    provisions. Under that interpretation, structural provisions (such as the choice of
    law provision) remain unaffected by the termination of the agreement and apply
    uniformly regardless of whether the agreement is in force or has been terminated.
    The damages limitation provision in the parties' agreement is not a performance
    obligation that is extinguished upon an agreement's termination. Rather, that
    provision, which limits the damages LMT may recoup, is more akin to a structural
    provision governing remedies and the resolution of disputes under a contract. As
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    '3