Core Communications, Inc. v. Verizon Maryland LLC , 744 F.3d 310 ( 2014 )


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  •                                  PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 12-2572
    CORE COMMUNICATIONS, INC.,
    Plaintiff – Appellant,
    v.
    VERIZON MARYLAND     LLC,   as    successor   entity   to    Verizon
    Maryland, Inc.,
    Defendant – Appellee,
    and
    MARYLAND PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION; STEVEN B. LARSEN, In
    his official capacity as Chairman of the Maryland Public
    Service Commission; HAROLD D. WILLIAMS, In his official
    capacity as Commissioner of the Maryland Public Service
    Commission; ALLEN M. FREIFELD, In his official capacity as
    Commissioner of the Maryland Public Service Commission;
    SUSANNE BROGAN, In her official capacity as Commissioner of
    the Maryland Public Service Commission; LAWRENCE BRENNER,
    In his official capacity as Commissioner of the Maryland
    Public Service Commission,
    Defendants.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of
    Maryland, at Baltimore.     J. Frederick Motz, Senior District
    Judge. (1:02-cv-03180-JFM)
    Argued:   December 12, 2013                    Decided:     March 6, 2014
    Before WILKINSON, KING, and GREGORY, Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed by published opinion. Judge King wrote the opinion, in
    which Judge Wilkinson and Judge Gregory joined.
    ARGUED: Ralph Lee Gleaton, II, GLEATON WYATT HEWITT, PA,
    Greenville, South Carolina, for Appellant. Scott H. Angstreich,
    KELLOGG,   HUBER,   HANSEN,   TODD,   EVANS   &   FIGEL,   P.L.L.C.,
    Washington,   D.C.,   for   Appellee.      ON   BRIEF:   Andrew   M.
    Hetherington, Jessica C. Collins, KELLOGG, HUBER, HANSEN, TODD,
    EVANS & FIGEL, P.L.L.C., Washington, D.C., for Appellee.
    2
    KING, Circuit Judge:
    Plaintiff    Core   Communications,         Inc.    appeals    the   district
    court’s award of summary judgment to defendant Verizon Maryland,
    LLC,    successor     to   Verizon        Maryland,       Inc.    (interchangeably
    “Verizon”), with respect to a pair of tort claims pursued by
    Core under Maryland law.             See Core Commc’ns, Inc. v. Verizon
    Md., Inc., No. 1:02-cv-03180 (D. Md. Aug. 10, 2012), ECF No. 66
    (the    “Memorandum    Opinion”).          Core     contends      that   the    court
    further     erred     when,     as    a        result     of     granting      partial
    reconsideration of its Memorandum Opinion, it awarded nominal
    damages of only one dollar to Core on its related claim for
    breach of contract.           See Core Commc’ns, Inc. v. Verizon Md.,
    Inc., No. 1:02-cv-03180 (D. Md. Nov. 27, 2012), ECF No. 73 (the
    “Reconsideration Order”).          As explained below, we affirm.
    I.
    A.
    The Telecommunications Act of 1996, Pub. L. No. 104-104,
    
    110 Stat. 56
     (codified as amended in scattered sections of 47
    U.S.C.) (“the Act”), was designed to increase competition in
    local telephone markets.           See Verizon Commc’ns, Inc. v. FCC, 
    535 U.S. 467
    , 489 (2002).         To that end, the Act required established
    telephone     companies       to     enter       into     contracts      known     as
    interconnection agreements (in the singular, an “ICA”) with new
    3
    market entrants seeking to connect with existing networks.                        See
    
    47 U.S.C. § 251
    .     In   the    Baltimore     area,    Verizon       was    the
    established phone company, that is, the incumbent local exchange
    carrier    (“ILEC”),    and    Core    was    one   of   several    new     market
    entrants, known as competitive local exchange carriers (in the
    singular, a “CLEC”).          Pursuant to the Act, Core sought an ICA
    with Verizon, and, in order to expedite negotiations, the two
    companies agreed — at Core’s suggestion — to adopt the terms of
    a    previously   approved     ICA    between    Verizon’s    predecessor         and
    another CLEC.     On July 14, 1999, the companies jointly submitted
    their proposed ICA to the Maryland Public Service Commission
    (the “PSC”) for its review and approval.              On September 15, 1999,
    the PSC approved that ICA (the “Core ICA”). 1
    On July 27, 1999, while the PSC’s approval of the Core ICA
    was pending, Core wrote Verizon to request that the proposed
    interconnection — as to which Core would be a wholesale customer
    of   Verizon   — be     accomplished     by     September    10,   1999.         At   a
    1
    As the district court explained, “[r]ather than negotiate
    a new agreement with Verizon, Core decided to adopt the terms of
    Verizon’s   (then  Bell   Atlantic’s)  agreement  with  American
    Communications Services of Maryland, Inc.”    See Memorandum Op.
    6. That agreement had been approved by the PSC about two years
    earlier, in 1997.    Pursuant to regulations promulgated by the
    Federal Communications Commission under the Act, “an [ILEC]
    shall make available . . . to any [CLEC] any [ICA] in its
    entirety to which the [ILEC] is a party that is approved by a
    state commission.” See 47 C.F.R § 51.809(a).
    4
    meeting   between     Core      and   Verizon    on    August   11,     1999,    the
    companies    agreed      that    Core’s   interconnection       would    occur    at
    Verizon’s “Wire Center” in Baltimore, which was “on-net” with
    Verizon, that is, the Wire Center was physically connected to
    Verizon’s central network and housed the needed equipment.                       In
    tension     with    Core’s       proposed      timeline,     however,      Verizon
    estimated that it would take another four to six months before
    the   essential     new    equipment      for    Core’s     interconnection       —
    including    an    OC-12        multiplexer     (the   “OC-12    Mux”)     and    a
    corresponding OC-12 facility ring (the “OC-12 IOF Ring”) — was
    available for use.
    Desiring      to     avoid      having     its      preferred      date    of
    interconnection delayed for several months, Core suggested that,
    instead of installing the new OC-12 Mux and OC-12 IOF Ring,
    Verizon should utilize an existing multiplexer and “Loop Ring”
    already in the Wire Center.            Verizon acknowledged that it would
    be technically feasible to use the existing equipment for the
    Core interconnection, but, as a matter of internal policy, it
    declined to do so.           On August 15, 1999, Verizon advised Core
    that, in any event, the existing multiplexer and Loop Ring were
    already assigned to a Verizon “customer of record.” 2                   Only later
    2
    On August 20, 1999, Core amended its initial notification
    to request that its interconnection with Verizon be deferred
    from September 10, 1999, until September 18, 1999.
    5
    did Verizon disclose that the customer of record to which it had
    referred was Core itself, already a Verizon retail customer in a
    separate context.             The existing equipment was never used for the
    Core interconnection, and the new OC-12 Mux and OC-12 IOF Ring
    were       installed     by   Verizon      in    late    November        1999.     The   Core
    interconnection was consummated on December 23, 1999.
    On October 8, 1999, Core filed a complaint with the PSC,
    alleging that Verizon had breached the Core ICA by delaying the
    interconnection.              In    2004,       the    PSC     ruled     against   Verizon,
    concluding that Verizon was obliged, under the Core ICA, to use
    its    existing     equipment        and    make       the    Core     interconnection     by
    September 18, 1999, as Core had requested.                               In 2008, Verizon
    sought review of the PSC’s adverse order by filing a complaint
    for declaratory relief in the District of Maryland, as it was
    entitled       to   do    under      the    Act. 3           Verizon’s     district      court
    complaint       (“Civil       No.   08-503”)          requested      a   declaration     that
    Verizon had neither violated the Core ICA nor any duty of good
    faith and fair dealing relating thereto.                               In June 2009, the
    court granted Verizon’s request for summary judgment, thereby
    3
    Pursuant to 
    47 U.S.C. § 252
    (e)(6), federal judicial review
    in the appropriate district court is the exclusive means of
    contesting a State commission’s determinations relating to
    enforcement of an ICA. See Iowa Util. Bd. v. FCC, 
    120 F.3d 753
    ,
    803-04 (8th Cir. 1997), aff’d in part, rev’d in part on other
    grounds, 
    525 U.S. 366
     (1999).
    6
    overturning the PSC’s 2004 decision ruling Verizon in breach of
    the Core ICA.         See Verizon Md., Inc. v. Core Commc’ns, Inc., 
    631 F. Supp. 2d 690
         (D.    Md.   2009).          Core   appealed    the    court’s
    ruling,       and   we    reversed.        See     Verizon         Md.,   Inc.    v.   Core
    Commc’ns, Inc., 405 F. App’x 706 (4th Cir. 2010) (unpublished)
    (the “first appeal”).              In so doing, we concluded that “Verizon
    had a duty to provide Core with the requested interconnection
    [in September 1999] and therefore breached [the Core ICA].”                             
    Id. at 714
    .       We then remanded the matter to the district court for
    further proceedings, “including a determination of damages” and
    an assessment of “whether Verizon also breached an implied duty
    of good faith and fair dealing.”                 
    Id.
     4
    B.
    On October 13, 2011, the district court consolidated the
    remand proceedings in Civil No. 08-503 with a separate seven-
    count complaint that had been filed by Core against Verizon in
    the   Circuit       Court    for    Baltimore     City      nine    years   earlier,     in
    2002.      Asserting        federal      question        jurisdiction,      Verizon    had
    removed the state court complaint to the District of Maryland
    4
    Because Core had never lodged a counterclaim in Verizon’s
    declaratory judgment action, the district court might have been
    technically unable to comply with our instruction to calculate
    and award damages for Verizon’s breach of the Core ICA.     That
    latent pitfall, however, was obviated by the consolidation of
    the remand proceedings with Core’s 2002 complaint, as described
    further herein.
    7
    (“Civil   No.       02-3180”),      where,         on    January        8,    2003,       it    was
    administratively closed without prejudice to being reopened upon
    disposition of the PSC proceedings.
    In its        2002    complaint,        Core      alleged     a   single          count   for
    breach    of    contract;         three        related        claims         for       promissory
    estoppel, unjust enrichment, and breach of warranty; and three
    state law tort claims — misrepresentation (both negligent and
    intentional), concealment (both negligent and intentional), and
    unfair    competition.             Notably,          the      parties        agreed       in    the
    consolidated        proceedings         —    and   also       agree     here       —    that    our
    decision in the first appeal is entitled to preclusive effect on
    the   issue    of    Verizon’s      liability           for   the     breach       of    contract
    claim alleged in Core’s 2002 complaint.                        The tort claims alleged
    in Civil No. 02-3180 derived from the proposition that Verizon
    had   lied     to     Core      about       the    reasons        for    delaying          Core’s
    interconnection        in       1999,       such   delay       constituting             Verizon’s
    breach of the Core ICA.                 In a similar vein, Core alleged that
    Verizon had improperly failed to disclose, in or about August
    1999, Core’s status as the Verizon “customer of record” assigned
    to the existing equipment at the Wire Center in Baltimore.
    The district court’s 2011 consolidation of the proceedings
    in Civil No. 08-503 and Civil No. 02-3180 engendered an early
    round of dispositive motions.                  After hearing argument, the court
    ruled, by      order       of   February      2,     2012,     that     Core’s         promissory
    8
    estoppel, unjust enrichment, and breach of warranty claims had
    been rendered superfluous by the first appeal, inasmuch as Core
    could recover nothing on those claims that it was not already
    entitled to for Verizon’s breach of the Core ICA.                         At the same
    time, Core conceded that there was no independent action under
    Maryland       law   for   breach     of   a     duty   of   good   faith    and    fair
    dealing, effectively removing that claim from the litigation.
    Thus,     as    of   early    2012,    the       following   issues      remained    for
    resolution in the consolidated proceedings:                    (1) Core’s damages
    for Verizon’s breach of the Core ICA; and (2) Core’s tort claims
    for misrepresentation, concealment, and unfair competition. 5
    On remand following the first appeal, the parties, in aid
    of the consolidated proceedings, engaged in further discovery.
    Of   some      importance     was   Verizon’s        deposition     of   Bret   Mingo,
    Core’s president.            Mingo testified about, among other things,
    Core’s initial entry into the telecommunications marketplace in
    Maryland in 1997.            With respect to Verizon’s refusal in August
    1999 to use the existing multiplexer and Loop Ring at the Wire
    Center for Core’s interconnection, Mingo clarified that Verizon
    5
    In its August 10, 2012 Memorandum Opinion, the district
    court recognized Core’s concession on the good faith and fair
    dealing claim. Therein, the court concluded that “dismissal of
    Verizon’s claim for declaratory relief that it did not breach an
    implied duty of good faith and fair dealing is appropriate.”
    Memorandum Op. 2 n.2.
    9
    had       never        maintained    that      such    an        interconnection       was
    impossible.               Instead,      Verizon       had        asserted     that     the
    interconnection would violate its internal policies.                          Mingo also
    acknowledged that Verizon had never advised Core that Verizon
    intended          to     unduly     delay      the    Core        interconnection       or
    deliberately           contravene      the    Core    ICA.         Critically,       Mingo
    acknowledged that he could not identify any untrue statement
    made in that regard by any Verizon employee.
    Mingo        also      conceded        that,    at     the     time      the    Core
    interconnection negotiations were ongoing, he knew that Core was
    a retail customer of Verizon’s at the Wire Center.                           Accordingly,
    upon visiting the Wire Center prior to the Core interconnection,
    Mingo became “perplexed” when Verizon advised him that the only
    multiplexer        located     there    was    already      in    use   by    an   unnamed
    retail customer.            J.A. 260. 6      Mingo did not share with Verizon,
    however, his contemporaneous belief that Core “must be [that]
    customer.”         Id. at 263.         Finally, Mingo admitted that he knew
    that different Verizon employees were assigned to handle retail
    transactions — as opposed to wholesale transactions, such as
    that relating to the Core ICA — and he could not say whether any
    of those employees ever communicated with each other.
    6
    Citations herein to “J.A. __” refer to the contents of the
    Joint Appendix filed by the parties in this appeal.
    10
    During      the    discovery    proceedings,      the    parties     exchanged
    expert reports on the damages issue.                   Core’s expert opined that
    the interconnection delay of roughly three months had resulted
    in several million dollars of lost profits to Core from 1999 to
    2011.        Verizon’s rebuttal expert, unsurprisingly, took a strong
    view to the contrary.             The parties thereafter agreed to defer
    any expert depositions and Daubert motions pending completion of
    the summary judgment proceedings.
    In    early   2012,    the     parties    submitted      cross-motions       for
    summary judgment regarding contract damages and the resolution
    of Core’s surviving tort claims.                   Core reasoned that it was
    entitled to summary judgment on each of its tort claims for
    misrepresentation,            concealment,         and     unfair      competition,
    insisting that the facts necessary to prove each claim had been
    definitively established by our decision in the first appeal.
    In   opposition       to    Core’s     motion    for   summary     judgment    and    in
    support of its own cross-motion, Verizon emphasized the evidence
    that it had gleaned in discovery — particularly the deposition
    of Mingo — indicating that Verizon had neither intentionally
    breached the Core ICA nor deceived Core in any way.
    In    its   summary    judgment    papers,       Verizon    argued    for    the
    first time that the Core ICA contained an exculpatory provision
    that served to insulate Verizon from the damages Core pursued.
    11
    Verizon directed the district court to section 26.2 of the Core
    ICA, which provides that
    [n]either Party shall be liable to the other in
    connection with the provision or use of services
    offered under this Agreement for indirect, incidental,
    consequential, reliance or special damages, including
    (without    limitation)    damages   for   lost   profits
    (collectively, “Consequential Damages”), regardless of
    the form of action, whether in contract, warranty,
    strict   liability,     or   tort,   including,   without
    limitation,    negligence   of   any  kind   .  .   .   .
    Notwithstanding the foregoing limitation, a Party’s
    liability shall not be limited by this subsection in
    the event of its willful or intentional misconduct.
    J.A. 531 (the “Exculpatory Clause” or the “Clause”).                      According
    to   Verizon,        the   Exculpatory    Clause     barred   the   consequential,
    lost-profit damages that Core was demanding for Verizon’s breach
    of the Core ICA.           From that premise, Verizon reasoned, the only
    contract damages available to Core, consistent with the evidence
    it had forecast, were nominal in nature.                      Verizon contended,
    moreover, that the Clause barred recovery of damages for any
    tort       claims,    except   those     involving    “willful      or   intentional
    misconduct,” which, Verizon insisted, Core was unable to prove. 7
    7
    As explained further herein, at least three aspects of the
    Exculpatory Clause are pertinent here:
    •   That consequential damages cannot be recovered by
    either party;
    •   that negligence claims are barred; and
    •
    that tort claims involving willful or intentional
    misconduct are preserved.
    (Continued)
    12
    Core    objected     to   Verizon’s      reliance   on   the   Exculpatory
    Clause, asserting that Verizon had waived any rights thereunder
    by failing to timely invoke the Clause as an affirmative defense
    under Rule 8(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, that
    is, by not properly pleading the Clause in its answer to Core’s
    2002 complaint.          Core also pointed out that Verizon had not
    relied on the Clause at all in its declaratory judgment action. 8
    If the Clause was not waived, Core argued, it was nevertheless
    unenforceable     under    Maryland     law    because   it   contravened   the
    State’s public policy.         Finally, Core maintained, if the Clause
    were enforced, Core was yet entitled to recover damages based on
    Core’s interpretation of the Clause, as well as the “performance
    penalties” authorized by section 27.3 of the Core ICA.
    During the pendency of the summary judgment motions, Core
    withdrew    its   tort    claim   for   misrepresentation,      acknowledging
    that no evidence suggested that Verizon had made an affirmative
    misrepresentation of any kind.           That concession left in dispute
    8
    Relatedly, Core asserted that Verizon’s invocation of the
    Exculpatory Clause was untimely because Verizon had not sought
    an interpretation of the Clause by the PSC. That contention is
    foreclosed by our recent decision in Central Telephone Co. of
    Virginia v. Sprint Communications Co. of Virginia, Inc., in
    which we ruled that the Act “does not require a State commission
    to interpret and enforce an ICA in the first instance.” See 
    715 F.3d 501
    , 514 (4th Cir. 2013).
    13
    the following issues:           whether the Exculpatory Clause had been
    timely invoked by Verizon; if so, its impact; Core’s damages for
    Verizon’s breach of the Core ICA; and whether Core’s remaining
    tort claims — concealment and unfair competition — could be
    resolved on summary judgment, or should, on the other hand, be
    decided by a jury. 9
    On August 10, 2012, the district court filed its Memorandum
    Opinion resolving those issues.               As a preliminary matter, the
    court       rejected   Core’s   assertion    that   Verizon   had   waived   the
    benefit of the Exculpatory Clause by failing to properly and
    timely invoke the Clause in its pleadings.              The court reasoned,
    “Unlike a statute of limitations affirmative defense . . . the
    [Exculpatory Clause was] an integral part of the contract at
    issue,” and thus not subject to the pleading requirements of
    Rule       8(c).   Memorandum    Op.   15    n.6.   Furthermore,     the   court
    explained that “no adverse consequences resulted from Verizon’s
    failure to formally raise and discuss the [Exculpatory Clause]
    9
    Although Core’s 2002 complaint alleged both “negligent”
    and “intentional” concealment, Maryland law recognizes a single
    cause of action for concealment, and intent to defraud or
    deceive is an essential element thereof.      See Lloyd v. Gen.
    Motors Corp., 
    916 A.2d 257
    , 274 (Md. 2007). The Maryland courts
    have sometimes referred to the concealment action as “fraudulent
    concealment.”   See 
    id.
      In any event, Core abandoned its claim
    for negligent concealment in the district court.
    14
    earlier since it was only after the Fourth Circuit’s remand that
    [the district court] focused specifically on damages.”                        
    Id.
    With   respect     to       the    enforceability        and    impact      of    the
    Exculpatory     Clause       on    the     other     issues,   the     district        court
    conducted two separate analyses.                     As to the tort claims, the
    court ruled, on the basis of state law public policy principles,
    that the Clause could not be enforced. 10                      With respect to the
    contract damages issue, the court opined that its enforcement of
    the   Clause     would        frustrate        the     Act’s    goal     of       removing
    impediments to competition in local telecommunications markets.
    Thus, the Memorandum Opinion recited, the Clause could not bar
    Core’s     request     for    consequential          damages    on    the     breach     of
    contract claim.
    Turning    to     the       merits      of   the   concealment        and     unfair
    competition     tort    claims,         the   district    court      rejected      at   the
    outset Core’s contention that the essential elements of those
    claims had been established by our decision’s factual recitation
    in the first appeal.              The court set forth that the crux of the
    concealment claim was that Verizon had obfuscated Core’s status
    as the “customer of record” at the Wire Center in 1999, to which
    10
    The district court’s public policy analysis of the
    Exculpatory Clause, as applied to Core’s intentional tort
    claims, was arguably unnecessary.  Such claims, by the plain
    terms of the Clause, were outside its scope, and therefore
    preserved. See supra note 7.
    15
    the existing multiplexer and Loop Ring were already assigned.
    Had Core known that it was actually that customer of record,
    Core’s     argument      went,     it   could    have   demanded    an   immediate
    interconnection using the existing Wire Center equipment.                       This
    theory, in the court’s view, was fatally flawed.                     Focusing on
    the concealment claim’s element of intent to defraud or deceive,
    see Lloyd v. Gen. Motors Corp., 
    916 A.2d 257
    , 274 (Md. 2007),
    the     court     could    discern         “no   evidence   supporting      Core’s
    contention that Verizon’s motive in not disclosing the identity
    of the customer of record was to deceive Core, and thereby cause
    a delay in interconnection.”                 Memorandum Op. 10. 11       The court
    then explained that Core’s unfair competition claim failed for
    the same reasons, that is, there was a lack of proof on the
    issue      of   intent    to     defraud    or   deceive.     See    id.   at    14.
    Accordingly, the court awarded summary judgment to Verizon on
    each of the remaining tort claims.                  A jury issue nonetheless
    remained, according to the court, with respect to the proper
    measure of damages for Verizon’s breach of the Core ICA.
    11
    As an alternative basis for awarding summary judgment to
    Verizon on the concealment claim, the district court explained
    that, even if Core could have established Verizon’s intent to
    defraud or deceive, Core “[could not] prove that it took action
    in justifiable reliance on the concealment.” Memorandum Op. 11.
    On this record, according to the court, “Core knew or should
    have realized that it was the unidentified customer of record.”
    Id. at 12.
    16
    That jury trial, of course, never occurred.                        Core asked the
    district court to reconsider its rulings on the tort claims,
    highlighting      evidence    that    it       contended      the        court    had     not
    properly    evaluated.        Verizon      filed       its    own        reconsideration
    motion, maintaining that the court had erred by declining to
    enforce     the   Exculpatory       Clause      as     a    bar     to     consequential
    damages.      Verizon     therein    directed         the    court’s       attention      to
    decisions of the Federal Communications Commission (the “FCC”)
    in which the FCC had consistently sanctioned similar exculpatory
    provisions in other ICAs.            Those decisions, Verizon urged, were
    entitled    to    deference    and    application,           in    adherence       to    the
    Supreme Court’s decision in National Cable & Telecommunications
    Ass’n v. Brand X Internet Services.                    See 
    545 U.S. 967
    , 980-81
    (2005)    (citing   Chevron,     U.S.A,        Inc.    v.    Natural       Res.    Defense
    Council,    Inc.,   
    467 U.S. 837
    ,    843-44       (1984)      (explaining          that
    agency’s reasonable implementation of statute it administers is
    entitled to acceptance by federal courts)).                       Verizon also argued
    that the PSC’s 1999 approval of the Core ICA was a conclusive
    determination that the Exculpatory Clause was consistent with
    the public interest.
    The    district     court,     by    its        Reconsideration            Order    of
    November 27, 2012, granted Verizon’s motion and denied Core’s.
    The   Reconsideration      Order     therefore        enforced       the    Exculpatory
    Clause as a bar to Core’s recovery of any consequential damages
    17
    on   its    breach       of        contract     claim.          When      it    entered       the
    Reconsideration Order, the court issued a separate memorandum to
    the parties, requesting them to “agree upon a form of judgment”
    that would be consistent with the “limited amount that the ICA
    permits in light of the rulings [the court] made,” and which
    would “enable the parties to appeal [those] rulings.”                                 S.A. 3. 12
    Verizon    responded          to    the    court’s      request       a    week      later,    on
    December    3,    2012,       and    proposed        that   the      judgment       award    only
    nominal damages to Core.                   Verizon therein represented to the
    court     that    Core    “[did]          not    object”        to    Verizon’s       proposed
    judgment.        Id. at 4.           Core did not independently or directly
    respond to the court’s request or to Verizon’s representation of
    Core’s     position,      but        instead     filed      a     notice       of   appeal    on
    December 26, 2012, prior to judgment being entered.                                 Thereafter,
    on January 15, 2013, the court adopted Verizon’s proposal for
    nominal damages and entered judgment accordingly, awarding Core
    the sum of one dollar.                We possess jurisdiction pursuant to the
    provisions of 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    . 13
    12
    Our citation to “S.A. __” refers to the contents of the
    Supplemental Appendix filed by the parties in this appeal.
    13
    In accordance with Rule 4(a)(2) of the Federal Rules of
    Appellate Procedure, Core’s premature notice of appeal was
    effective upon the district court’s entry of the judgment.
    Core, nonetheless, filed an amended post-judgment notice of
    appeal on January 17, 2013.
    18
    II.
    We review for abuse of discretion a district court’s ruling
    that a defense was properly and timely raised.                         See Polsby v.
    Chase, 
    970 F.2d 1360
    , 1364 (4th Cir. 1992), vacated and remanded
    on other grounds, 
    507 U.S. 1048
     (1993).                      We review de novo a
    district court’s award of summary judgment, viewing the facts
    and   inferences    reasonably        drawn      therefrom     in   the   light    most
    favorable to the nonmoving party.                     See Woollard v. Gallagher,
    
    712 F.3d 865
    , 873 (4th Cir. 2013).                    A summary judgment award is
    appropriate only when the record shows “that there is no genuine
    dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law.”           Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
    III.
    On appeal, Core challenges three aspects of the district
    court’s rulings.       First, it maintains that the court erred in
    allowing    the    Exculpatory    Clause         to    be   invoked,    and   then   by
    enforcing    the     Clause      as    a        bar    to    Core’s     recovery     of
    consequential damages.        Second, Core contends that the court’s
    summary judgment awards to Verizon on Core’s concealment and
    unfair competition tort claims were erroneously made.                         Finally,
    Core argues that, notwithstanding the Exculpatory Clause, the
    19
    court erred in ruling that Core was entitled to only nominal
    damages on its breach of contract claim.
    A.
    We will first assess the timeliness and application of the
    Exculpatory Clause.      On this front, Core advances two arguments:
    first, that Verizon failed to timely invoke the Clause; and,
    second, that the Clause is void under principles of Maryland
    contract law.
    1.
    Core    argues     that    Verizon      waived    the   benefit   of     the
    Exculpatory Clause by neglecting to invoke it as an affirmative
    defense under Rule 8(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,
    that is, by not properly pleading the Clause in its answer to
    Core’s 2002 complaint.         Lest Verizon’s inattention be construed
    as a mere oversight, Core reminds us that Verizon continued to
    ignore the Clause in its declaratory judgment action.                       Thus,
    according to Core, the district court abused its discretion in
    permitting    Verizon   to     raise   the   Clause,    post-remand,   in     the
    summary judgment proceedings.
    Put succinctly, we discern no abuse in the district court’s
    ruling.      In analyzing a party’s failure to timely invoke an
    exculpatory provision, we have recognized an exception to Rule
    8(c) where, as here, the pertinent provision was “evident” in
    the contract “before the trial court.”                 Caterpillar Overseas,
    20
    S.A. v. Marine Transp. Inc., 
    900 F.2d 714
    , 725 n.7 (4th Cir.
    1990).       Although      not     relying      specifically        on   Caterpillar
    Overseas     to    support       its   ruling    on     timeliness,       the     court
    nevertheless        identified         the      salient        legal      principle.
    Furthermore, the court properly observed that Core was neither
    unfairly surprised nor unduly prejudiced by Verizon’s delay in
    invoking the Exculpatory Clause, in that the parties did not
    have occasion to address the issue of damages until after the
    first appeal.           Thus, the Clause was timely and appropriately
    invoked.
    2.
    Next, Core contends that the Exculpatory Clause cannot be
    enforced    because      Maryland      law    bars    the    use    of   “exculpatory
    agreements in transactions affecting the public interest.”                             See
    Wolf v. Ford, 
    644 A.2d 522
    , 532 (Md. 1994).                        Verizon counters,
    however, that the Clause is enforceable under federal law, and
    that     state    law    principles     cannot,       at    this     stage,     void    a
    provision of an ICA already approved by the appropriate State
    commission.       Verizon maintains that, pursuant to the Act, the
    proper    time    for     Core    to   object    on    the    asserted        basis     of
    Maryland’s public policy was prior to the PSC’s approval of the
    Core ICA.    We agree with Verizon.
    The Telecommunications Act “t[ook] the regulation of local
    telecommunications competition away from the States,” imposing a
    21
    federal regime to govern certain aspects of such competition.
    See AT&T Corp. v. Iowa Utils. Bd., 
    525 U.S. 366
    , 378 n.6 (1999).
    Approved ICAs between ILECs and CLECs are the “tools” through
    which the Act is implemented and enforced, and are thus, as we
    have explained, “creation[s] of federal law.”                   See Verizon Md.,
    Inc. v. Global NAPS, Inc., 
    377 F.3d 355
    , 364 (4th Cir. 2004)
    (internal quotation marks omitted).                  The contractual duty at
    issue in this case — Verizon’s duty to interconnect with Core —
    is   a   duty    imposed     by    the   Act    itself.        Accordingly,         the
    resolution      of   a   claim    regarding    the   scope    of   that    statutory
    duty, including the remedies available for its breach, depends
    on the interpretation and application of federal law.                     See 
    id.
    None of our sister courts of appeals have weighed in on the
    specific issue of whether the Act abides the existence of an
    exculpatory provision in an approved ICA.                    Nonetheless, we are
    satisfied with the district court’s conclusion that “exculpatory
    clauses, like section 26 of the [Core] ICA, are not void under
    the Telecommunications Act.”             See Reconsideration Order 1.           The
    court so concluded by deferentially applying FCC decisions that
    have approved the use of exculpatory provisions under the Act.
    See In re Implementation of the Local Competition Provisions in
    the Telecomm’s Act of 1996, 11 FCC Rcd. 15499, 15576 (1996)
    (hereinafter cited as the “Local Competition Order”); see also
    22
    In re Cavalier Tel., LLC, 18 FCC Rcd. 25887, 25985-87 (Wireline
    Comp. Bur. 2003) (hereinafter cited as the “Cavalier Order”).
    The Local Competition Order, in 1996, constituted the FCC’s
    initial      declaration        implementing        the      local    competition
    provisions     of   the    Act. 14     Therein,    the    FCC    “reject[ed]”   the
    contention that it would be impermissible for an ILEC to request
    that a CLEC “limit its legal remedies as part of a negotiated
    [ICA].”   Local Competition Order 15576.                 The FCC also recognized
    that exculpatory provisions are a legitimate negotiating tool;
    for example, “A party may voluntarily agree to limit its legal
    rights or remedies in order to obtain a valuable concession from
    another party.”           
    Id.
       The Local Competition Order identified
    only one circumstance where a request to limit a party’s legal
    rights    might     be     improper,        and   that    circumstance    is    not
    applicable here.          See 
    id.
     (explaining that “an [ILEC] may not
    demand that the [CLEC] attest that the [ICA] complies with all
    provisions of [the Act], federal regulations, and state law”).
    In the 2003 Cavalier Order, the FCC arbitrated a dispute
    between   an    ILEC      and   a    CLEC    involving     ICA   negotiations    in
    14
    Certain of the regulations adopted in the Local
    Competition Order were subsequently vacated after review in the
    federal courts. See Verizon Commc’ns, Inc. v. FCC, 
    535 U.S. 467
    (2002).   All aspects of the Order upon which we rely today,
    however, remain undisturbed.
    23
    Virginia. 15    Those parties had already agreed to an ICA provision
    functionally identical to the Exculpatory Clause, which limited
    the ILEC’s liability for lost profits and other consequential
    damages.      The CLEC, however, sought to add a broad exclusion to
    the proposed ICA’s exculpatory provision that would entitle the
    CLEC to damages “where [the ILEC] violat[ed] any law governing
    communications.”          See Cavalier Order 25985.              The CLEC argued
    that its right to damages under the Act should not be curtailed
    or    eliminated     at     the     ILEC’s    insistence,        because     such    a
    limitation     would      greatly    diminish       the   ILEC’s     incentive       to
    perform its obligations under the ICA.                The ILEC countered that
    the   broad    exclusion      effectively       gutted     the     proposed    ICA’s
    exculpatory provision, and that the ICA otherwise provided the
    CLEC with sufficient protection.
    The   FCC    agreed     with    the    ILEC   and   rejected     the    CLEC’s
    proposed change to the exculpatory provision.                        Specifically,
    the FCC determined that the CLEC’s effort to “eviscerate” the
    exculpatory       provision    was    “commercially       unreasonable.”            See
    15
    In the proceedings leading to the Cavalier Order, the FCC
    assumed jurisdiction when the State commission declined to
    resolve the Virginia dispute. See 
    47 U.S.C. § 252
    (e)(5) (“If a
    State commission fails to act to carry out its responsibility
    under this section in any proceeding or other matter under this
    section, then the [FCC] . . . shall assume the responsibility of
    the State commission . . . with respect to the proceeding or
    matter and act for the State commission.”).
    24
    Cavalier Order 25986.           The CLEC’s concerns about undermining the
    ILEC’s       incentive     to    comply    with     the     Act        were     mitigated,
    according to the FCC, by the remedies available elsewhere in the
    ICA and under applicable law.                   The FCC later issued an order
    approving an ICA between the parties that included the original
    exculpatory provision.             See In re Cavalier Tel., LLC, 19 FCC
    Rcd. 4070 (Wireline Comp. Bur. 2004).
    The      Reconsideration         Order’s     deference          to       these    FCC
    decisions was entirely appropriate.                      In Chevron, the Supreme
    Court “established a familiar two-step procedure for evaluating
    whether an agency's interpretation of a statute is lawful.”                             See
    Nat’l Cable & Telecomms. Ass’n v. Brand X Internet Servs., 
    545 U.S. 967
    , 986 (2005) (citing Chevron, U.S.A, Inc. v. Natural
    Res.    Defense     Council,       Inc.,   
    467 U.S. 837
    ,        843-44     (1984)).
    First, we assess “whether the statute’s plain terms directly
    address the precise question at issue.”                   
    Id.
     (internal quotation
    marks    and     alterations      omitted).         If    the   statute          is   deemed
    ambiguous on the question, “we defer at step two to the agency’s
    interpretation       so    long    as    the     construction      is       a   reasonable
    policy choice for the agency to make.”                    
    Id.
     (internal quotation
    marks omitted).           Applying that framework, we observe that the
    Act    itself    does     not   address    the    viability       of    an      exculpatory
    provision in an ICA.              The FCC’s decisions, on the other hand,
    convincingly illustrate the agency’s reasonable conclusion that
    25
    an exculpatory provision in an ICA does not offend any aspect of
    the Act.         We are therefore obliged to acknowledge that Verizon’s
    reliance on the Exculpatory Clause is not precluded by federal
    law.
    Though      federal      law    does       not   prohibit        the    use       of     an
    exculpatory        provision     in    an    ICA,    the   Act    authorizes         a    State
    commission to reject any provision of an ICA that the commission
    deems “not consistent with the public interest, convenience, and
    necessity.”         See 
    47 U.S.C. § 252
    (e)(2)(A)(ii).                    This statutory
    prescription        creates     a     narrowly      defined      time    and    forum         for
    identifying        and   evaluating         any    state-level     policy      that       might
    invalidate part or all of an ICA.                   Neither the Act nor any other
    provision of federal law, however, subjects a State commission-
    sanctioned ICA to any subsequent attack on the basis of a state
    law principle.           By its approval, the PSC affixed the imprimatur
    of the State of Maryland on the Core ICA, confirming that it
    worked      no    injury   to    Maryland’s         public    interest. 16           In       that
    16
    We are constrained to note that Core, like a man who buys
    a dog yet cannot abide fleas, seeks to avoid a key provision of
    the very agreement, that is, the Core ICA, that it previously
    insisted upon.    Core’s position in the district court and on
    appeal — that the Exculpatory Clause is inconsistent with
    Maryland’s public interest — is a complete U-turn from the
    position Core took in 1999 when it sponsored the Core ICA before
    the PSC.     Though we reject on the merits Core’s newfound
    contentions regarding the enforceability of the Clause, we would
    not condone in any event Core’s apparent effort to manipulate
    our court system.    See King v. Herbert J. Thomas Mem’l Hosp.,
    (Continued)
    26
    circumstance, no further consideration of Maryland law or policy
    is appropriate. 17     As our distinguished colleague Judge Michael
    aptly     observed,   “[o]nce   the    [ICA]    is        approved,    the   [Act]
    requires the parties to abide by its terms.”                  See Verizon Md.,
    
    377 F.3d at 364
    .      Accordingly, the district court did not err in
    enforcing      the    Exculpatory     Clause         in      the      consolidated
    proceedings.
    B.
    We next assess Core’s challenge to the district court’s
    summary judgment awards with respect to Core’s state law tort
    claims for concealment and unfair competition.                  The Exculpatory
    Clause presents no obstacle to those intentional torts, inasmuch
    as the Clause does not limit the liability of either party for
    “willful or intentional misconduct.”           See J.A. 531.
    
    159 F.3d 192
    , 196 (4th Cir. 1998) (recognizing application of
    judicial estoppel to party who “assert[s] a position that is
    factually incompatible with a position taken in a prior judicial
    or administrative proceeding,” where tribunal has accepted
    initial position and party has assumed contrary position to gain
    unfair advantage) (citations omitted).
    17
    It may well be that, in the absence of governing federal
    principles, a court should draw on appropriate state law
    contract principles for an interpretation of an ICA. See, e.g.,
    Cent. Tel. Co. of Va. v. Sprint Commc’ns of Va., Inc., 
    715 F.3d 501
    , 517 (4th Cir. 2013).      Such a limited use of state law
    principles, however, falls far short of Core’s assertion that
    Maryland law “controls” our analysis of whether a party to an
    ICA may limit its liability thereunder.
    27
    Under   Maryland    law,   the    tort   of   concealment    has    five
    elements:
    (1) the defendant owed a duty to the plaintiff to
    disclose a material fact; (2) the defendant failed to
    disclose that fact; (3) the defendant intended to
    defraud or deceive the plaintiff; (4) the plaintiff
    took   action   in    justifiable   reliance  on   the
    concealment; and (5) the plaintiff suffered damages as
    a result of the defendant’s concealment.
    See Lloyd v. Gen. Motors Corp., 
    916 A.2d 257
    , 274 (Md. 2007).
    Each   of   those   five    elements     must   be   proven   by   clear   and
    convincing evidence.       See Rhee v. Highland Dev. Corp., 
    958 A.2d 385
    , 389 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 2008).             The related tort of unfair
    competition, on the other hand, is a more “flexib[le]” cause of
    action, but in all instances requires proof of “fraud, deceit,
    trickery or unfair methods of any sort.”              See Delmarva Sash &
    Door Co. of Md., Inc. v. Anderson Windows, Inc., 
    218 F. Supp. 2d 729
    , 733 (D. Md. 2002) (citing Balt. Bedding Corp. v. Moses, 
    34 A.2d 338
    , 342 (Md. 1943)).
    Core relies upon the same conduct to support both of its
    intentional tort claims:          that Verizon failed to disclose that
    Core was the “customer of record” to which the then existing
    multiplexer and Loop Ring in the Wire Center had been committed,
    and that, had Core known that fact, it could have demanded an
    immediate interconnection.         Verizon asserts that, viewed in the
    proper light, Core failed to produce any evidence of intent to
    28
    defraud or deceive, nor sufficient evidence of Core’s reasonable
    reliance on Verizon’s alleged deception.
    As a preliminary matter, we reject, as did the district
    court, Core’s assertion that the facts we “found” in the first
    appeal    are     sufficient         to    establish         Verizon’s      liability        for
    Core’s    tort       claims.         First,      “it    is    axiomatic      .     .    .   that
    appellate courts do not make factual findings.”                            See Robinson v.
    Wix Filtration Corp. LLC, 
    599 F.3d 403
    , 419 (4th Cir. 2010).
    Second, even if our factual recitation in the first appeal is
    accorded       some     weight,          Core        substantially        overstates         the
    inferences that could be permissibly drawn therefrom.                                  Finally,
    Core’s     concealment         and     unfair        competition         claims    were      not
    litigated       at     all     until      the    consolidated            proceedings        that
    occurred       post-remand,        and    only       then    did   the    parties       conduct
    discovery with an eye toward developing evidence specifically
    related to those intentional torts.
    Based on our de novo review of the summary judgment record,
    we agree with the district court’s assessment that no reasonable
    jury could find that Verizon unlawfully concealed any material
    fact from Core.              Our conclusion in that regard turns on the
    element    of     intent      to   defraud       or     deceive.         Core     has   simply
    offered     no       evidence      suggesting          that    Verizon’s         failure     to
    identify Core as the “customer of record” was driven by any
    intent    to     defraud     or    deceive       Core.        When   given       the    chance,
    29
    Mingo, as Core’s president, could merely assert that the failure
    to disclose occurred, and then theorize that Verizon must have
    done    so   intentionally    in    order   to    improperly    delay   the    Core
    interconnection.       A    claim   built   on    such   rank    speculation    is
    insufficient to survive summary judgment, as the court properly
    recognized.      Moreover, Mingo’s concession that he knew, and did
    not share, that Core was a retail customer in the Baltimore Wire
    Center establishes that Core could not have reasonably relied on
    the intentional concealment it alleges.
    Core’s unfair competition tort claim fails for the same
    reason, that is, the lack of evidence on the element of intent
    to defraud or deceive.             Though we are content to affirm the
    district court’s rulings on the merits of Core’s intentional
    tort claims, we also note our concern that those claims amount
    to little more than “the assertion of a contract claim in the
    guise of a tort.”          See Sibley v. Lutheran Hosp. of Md., Inc.,
    
    871 F.2d 479
    , 487 (4th Cir. 1989) (Murnaghan, J., concurring).
    Under Maryland law, “where the essence of a relationship between
    the parties is contractual in nature and the basis for the claim
    of     defendant’s   dereliction      is    its    failure      to   perform   the
    contract, the cause of action . . . is not available in [tort],
    but only in an action for breach of contract.”                  Abt Assoc., Inc.
    v. JHPIEGO Corp., 
    104 F. Supp. 2d 523
    , 527 (D. Md. 2000) (citing
    Baird v. C & P Tel. Co. of Balt., 
    117 A.2d 873
    , 879 (Md. 1955)).
    30
    Accordingly, the district court did not err in awarding Verizon
    summary judgment on Core’s tort claims.
    C.
    Lastly, we review the propriety of the district court’s
    judgment    awarding   nominal     damages         of   one    dollar   to    Core   for
    Verizon’s    breach    of   the   Core    ICA.          Core   contends      that,   the
    Exculpatory Clause notwithstanding, it is yet entitled to more
    than nominal damages for three reasons:                   (1) Verizon’s breach of
    the Core ICA involved “willful or intentional misconduct”; (2)
    the Core interconnection was not a “service” for purposes of the
    Clause; and (3) the Clause permits the award of “performance
    penalties,” as provided for in section 27.3 of the Core ICA. 18
    Core’s   first    theory,    that       it    can    recover      consequential
    damages for Verizon’s breach of the Core ICA because the breach
    involved “willful or intentional misconduct,” is without merit.
    The   “willful   or     intentional       misconduct”           exclusion      to    the
    Exculpatory Clause would apply exclusively to actions sounding
    18
    Verizon contends that Core waived its arguments for
    damages notwithstanding the Exculpatory Clause by failing to
    object to Verizon’s proposed form of judgment awarding nominal
    damages only.     Verizon’s point is that the district court
    specifically requested the parties’ views on what damages were
    available in light of its ruling that the Clause was
    enforceable, and Core remained silent. Core, however, maintains
    that it misunderstood the court’s request and believed it had no
    other recourse than to appeal.      In these circumstances, we
    decline to deem Core’s arguments waived and are content to
    address their merits.
    31
    in tort, because an intent to defraud or deceive is ordinarily
    not at issue in a breach of contract claim.                In any event, Core
    is   unable    to   show    that   Verizon     engaged   in    any   “willful    or
    intentional misconduct.”
    Second, Core emphasizes that the Exculpatory Clause only
    limits     Verizon’s       liability     for     consequential       damages    “in
    connection with the provision or use of services offered under
    [the Core ICA].”       J.A. 531 (emphasis added).             According to Core,
    interconnection is not a “service” within the meaning of the
    Clause.     For this proposition, Core relies on a district court
    decision from New Jersey, deciding that interconnection is not a
    “‘telecommunications service[]’ for purposes of [the Act].”                     See
    Global NAPS, Inc. v. Bell Atlantic-N.J., Inc., 
    287 F. Supp. 2d 532
    , 547 (D.N.J. 2003).            Verizon correctly responds that the
    court’s ruling in Global NAPS has no bearing on the Clause.                     The
    phrase “Telecommunications Service” has a precise meaning under
    the Act, which the Core ICA expressly incorporates and employs
    in   several    instances.         See    J.A.    484    (“‘Telecommunications
    Service’ is as defined in the Act”); see also id. at 486, 496,
    509, 512, 515, 524. 19       In the Clause, however, the parties do not
    19
    The    Act defines a “telecommunications service” as “the
    offering of    telecommunications for a fee directly to the public,
    or to such      classes of users as to be effectively available
    directly to    the public, regardless of the facilities used.” See
    
    47 U.S.C. § 153
    (53).
    32
    use the term “Telecommunications Service,” but instead use the
    single word “services.”                 Thus, the parties intended to draw a
    distinction          between     a   “Telecommunications           Service”        and     mere
    “services.”           We     conclude      that,   accorded       its    broad,       ordinary
    meaning,       the    word     “services”     in     the    Clause      must    include     the
    provision of an interconnection at Core’s request.
    Finally, Core maintains that it is entitled to “performance
    penalties” under section 27.3 of the Core ICA, which provides
    for    a    limited     remedy       not    barred    by    the   Exculpatory          Clause.
    Verizon responds that section 27.3 imposes specific evidentiary
    requirements          that    Core    has    not     met.       Section        27.1    defines
    certain        “performance          standards”       Verizon        must       satisfy      in
    connection with its obligations under the Core ICA, and section
    27.2       requires     Verizon       to    submit     quarterly         reports      of   its
    network’s performance with respect to those standards.                                See J.A.
    531-32.        If, “based on a statistically significant number of
    [such] reports” Core believes that Verizon is “not complying
    with the performance standards referenced in [section] 27.1,”
    then section 27.3 permits Core to seek redress in a court of
    competent jurisdiction.              
    Id.
    Core    has    provided       no    evidence       to   satisfy     the    predicate
    conditions for the performance penalties provided for in section
    27.3.       Core does not point to any quarterly report, much less a
    “statistically significant number” thereof.                          Instead, it relies
    33
    on   only     one   arguable       instance     of    non-compliance,       which    is
    insufficient to trigger the performance penalties provision of
    section 27.3.       Moreover, even if we were to ignore the quarterly
    report   requirement,         we   are   not    swayed    by    Core’s    unsupported
    assertion      that      it    could     prove       thousands      of    unspecified
    performance failures by Verizon.                 Core had the opportunity to
    marshal such evidence in the summary judgment proceedings, and
    it   failed    to   do   so.       Accordingly,       Core     is   not   entitled   to
    performance penalties under section 27.3.
    The   Exculpatory        Clause    therefore       bars   any   liability      for
    consequential damages arising from Verizon’s breach of the Core
    ICA, and Core has failed to establish its entitlement to any
    other remedy.         As a result, the district court properly entered
    judgment on Core’s breach of contract claim in the nominal sum
    of one dollar.
    IV.
    Pursuant to the foregoing, we affirm the judgment of the
    district court.
    AFFIRMED
    34
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 12-2572

Citation Numbers: 744 F.3d 310

Judges: Gregory, King, Wilkinson

Filed Date: 3/6/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/31/2023

Authorities (16)

Robinson v. Wix Filtration Corp. LLC , 599 F.3d 403 ( 2010 )

78-fair-emplpraccas-bna-239-74-empl-prac-dec-p-45569-22-employee , 159 F.3d 192 ( 1998 )

anthony-frank-sibley-md-v-lutheran-hospital-of-maryland-inc-duleep , 871 F.2d 479 ( 1989 )

caterpillar-overseas-sa-v-marine-transport-inc-farrell-lines-inc , 900 F.2d 714 ( 1990 )

verizon-maryland-incorporated-v-global-naps-incorporated-the-public , 377 F.3d 355 ( 2004 )

m-maureen-polsby-v-thomas-chase-irwin-j-kopin-mark-hallett-daniel-r , 970 F.2d 1360 ( 1992 )

Iowa Utilities Board v. F.C.C. , 120 F.3d 753 ( 1997 )

Rhee v. HIGHLAND DEVELOPMENT CORP. , 182 Md. App. 516 ( 2008 )

At&T Corp. v. Iowa Utilities Board , 119 S. Ct. 721 ( 1999 )

Verizon Communications Inc. v. FCC , 122 S. Ct. 1646 ( 2002 )

Verizon Maryland Inc. v. Core Communications, Inc. , 631 F. Supp. 2d 690 ( 2009 )

Abt Associates, Inc. v. Jhpiego Corp. , 104 F. Supp. 2d 523 ( 2000 )

Delmarva Sash & Door Co. of Maryland, Inc. v. Andersen ... , 218 F. Supp. 2d 729 ( 2002 )

Global Naps, Inc. v. Bell Atlantic-New Jersey, Inc. , 287 F. Supp. 2d 532 ( 2003 )

National Cable & Telecommunications Assn. v. Brand X ... , 125 S. Ct. 2688 ( 2005 )

Chevron U. S. A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, ... , 104 S. Ct. 2778 ( 1984 )

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