Full Spectrum Software, Inc. v. Forte Automation Systems, Inc. , 858 F.3d 666 ( 2017 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 15-2193
    FULL SPECTRUM SOFTWARE, INC.,
    Plaintiff, Appellee,
    v.
    FORTE AUTOMATION SYSTEMS, INC.,
    Defendant, Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. Timothy S. Hillman, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Torruella, Lynch, and Barron,
    Circuit Judges.
    Eric H. Loeffler, with whom Hinshaw & Culbertson LLP was on
    brief, for appellant.
    David M. McGlone, with whom Christian B.W. Stephens and
    Eckert, Seamans, Cherin & Mellott, LLC were on brief, for appellee.
    June 2, 2017
    BARRON, Circuit Judge.          This appeal concerns a dispute
    between two businesses: Forte Automation Systems, Inc. ("Forte"),
    the defendant-appellant, and Full Spectrum Software, Inc. ("Full
    Spectrum"), the plaintiff-appellee.           Their dispute requires us to
    resolve two distinct legal issues.           The first turns on whether the
    evidence in the record suffices to sustain the jury's verdict and
    chiefly concerns the scope of the Massachusetts catch-all consumer
    protection statute, chapter 93A.             See Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A.
    The other turns on whether Full Spectrum had a right to have its
    chapter 93A claim for damages tried by a jury in federal court at
    all.   Because we decide both issues in favor of Full Spectrum, we
    affirm.
    I.
    The following facts are uncontested. This dispute dates
    back to June of 2011.        At that time, Forte executed a contract
    with ProTom International, Inc. ("ProTom").                Under that contract
    with ProTom, Forte agreed to engineer specialized software for a
    proton radiation therapy station in a cancer treatment hospital.
    Full Spectrum became involved in the following way.
    After Forte secured the contract with ProTom, Forte
    executed   a   subcontract     to   complete      the   project   with   Medical
    Instruments,    Co.,   doing    business     as    Civco    Medical   Solutions
    ("Civco").     Civco, in turn, subcontracted software development
    services for the project to Full Spectrum.              On or about April 16,
    - 2 -
    2012, however, Civco pulled out of the project.    And, on April 16,
    a representative from Civco informed Full Spectrum, over email,
    that "starting today, all work performed on the product should be
    billed to Forte," and that Forte would want a quote on the
    remaining work.
    The next day, April 17, the president of Full Spectrum,
    Andrew Dallas, emailed the president of Forte, Toby Henderson, to
    confirm that Forte would be taking over management of the project.
    In that email, Dallas told Henderson, "In order to make the
    transition, we'll need to get our Consulting Services Agreement
    (CSA) in place with Forte along with a Work Order for the project."
    Dallas attached the CSA, along with Full Spectrum's billing rates,
    to the email.      No Work Order was attached.      Forte's Project
    Manager, Ed Roman, replied on April 18, directing Full Spectrum to
    continue work on the project.
    In accord with Roman's email, Full Spectrum continued to
    work on the project over the next several weeks.      Full Spectrum
    also billed Forte on April 30, May 7, and May 14, in the total
    amount of $133,053.75.     As we discuss in more detail below, the
    parties also continued to work out aspects of their commercial
    terms.     On May 3, Forte and Full Spectrum signed the CSA.   Full
    Spectrum then sent Forte the Work Order -- which contained specific
    details about the project -- and repeatedly requested that Forte
    sign it.    On May 14, Forte presented Full Spectrum with a Purchase
    - 3 -
    Order, which contained terms that were different from those in
    Full Spectrum's CSA and Work Order, and that were adverse to Full
    Spectrum. 1         On   that   same    date,    Full   Spectrum   terminated   its
    involvement with the project.                    Forte subsequently refused to
    compensate Full Spectrum for the work that Full Spectrum had
    completed between April 16 and May 14.
    On August 10, 2012, Full Spectrum, which is based in
    Massachusetts, filed this diversity suit against Forte, which is
    based       in    Illinois,     in     federal    court   in   the   District   of
    Massachusetts.           In the complaint, Full Spectrum alleged various
    claims under Massachusetts law, only two of which remain at issue
    on appeal.         These two claims are for breach of implied contract
    and violation of chapter 93A.
    Prior to trial, Full Spectrum moved to submit the chapter
    93A claim to a binding jury, or, in the alternative, to an advisory
    jury.       Forte objected under Rule 39 of the Federal Rules of Civil
    Procedure to submitting the claim to a binding jury, arguing that
    there is no right to a jury trial -- under state or federal law
    1
    For instance, the CSA required payment within 30 days of a
    billing date, whereas the Purchase Order allowed for payment within
    60 days of a billing date; the CSA provided that Full Spectrum's
    work product was under "no warranties of any kind, either express
    or implied," whereas the Purchase Order required a number of
    explicit warranties; and the CSA provided for termination by mutual
    agreement or at the completion of project phases, with 30 days'
    notice, whereas the Purchase Order provided that, in the case of
    seller default, Forte could cancel the agreement "at any time."
    - 4 -
    -- for claims under chapter 93A.    The District Court granted Full
    Spectrum's motion without comment.
    At the close of evidence, Forte submitted a motion under
    Rule 50(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure for judgment as
    a matter of law.   In its motion, Forte contended that there was
    not sufficient evidence to support a finding for Full Spectrum on
    either the implied contract or the chapter 93A claim. The District
    Court denied the motion without comment.
    Before the jury began deliberations, the District Court
    instructed the jury, "I have no opinion about what the facts are
    or what your verdict ought to be; that is solely and exclusively
    your duty and responsibility."    The jury then was given a special
    verdict form and returned the following verdict.    The jury found
    Forte liable for breach of implied contract and for knowing and
    willful violation of chapter 93A.    The jury awarded Full Spectrum
    $133,053.75 in actual damages, without specifying whether those
    damages arose from the breach of implied contract, from the
    violation of chapter 93A, or from some combination of the two.
    The jury also awarded Full Spectrum $350,000 in punitive damages
    specifically based on the violation of chapter 93A.
    In entering the judgment, the District Court noted that
    the judgment reflected a jury verdict, rather than a decision by
    the District Court itself.       Forte then renewed its motion for
    judgment as a matter of law pursuant to Rule 50(b) of the Federal
    - 5 -
    Rules of Civil Procedure.        The District Court denied the motion
    without comment.
    On appeal, Forte challenges the District Court's denial
    of Forte's motion for judgment as a matter of law on both Full
    Spectrum's implied contract claims and on its chapter 93A claims,
    contending that there was not sufficient evidence to support the
    jury's verdict on either claim. Forte also challenges the District
    Court's decision to submit Full Spectrum's chapter 93A claim to a
    jury notwithstanding Forte's objection under Rule 39.2
    II.
    We begin with Forte's challenge to the denial of Forte's
    motion for judgment as a matter of law based on insufficient
    evidence.     Our review is de novo.         Jones ex rel. U.S. v. Mass.
    Gen. Hosp., 
    780 F.3d 479
    , 487 (1st Cir. 2015).            We "must affirm
    unless the evidence, together with all reasonable inferences in
    favor of the verdict, could lead a reasonable person to only one
    conclusion,     namely,   that   the    moving   party   was   entitled   to
    judgment."     Astro-Med, Inc. v. Nihon Kohden Am., Inc., 
    591 F.3d 1
    , 13 (1st Cir. 2009) (citation omitted).           We must refrain from
    passing judgment upon the credibility of witnesses, resolving
    2 Full Spectrum contends that we lack jurisdiction over this
    appeal because Forte's Notice of Appeal was prematurely filed.
    This argument, however, is without merit in light of the 2009
    amendments to Rule 4 of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    - 6 -
    evidentiary conflicts, or evaluating the weight of the evidence.
    Delgado v. Pawtucket Police Dep't, 
    668 F.3d 42
    , 50 (1st Cir. 2012).
    A.
    As noted above, the jury found that Forte was liable for
    both breach of implied contract and for violating chapter 93A.
    The jury awarded Full Spectrum the entire amount that Full Spectrum
    claimed in actual damages without specifically basing that award
    on either theory of liability.        Forte makes no argument that,
    because the damages award was aggregated, that award cannot be
    sustained unless we sustain both theories of liability as a matter
    of law.     In fact, at oral argument, Forte expressly conceded the
    opposite.     As a result, we may uphold the judgment for actual
    damages so long as there is sufficient evidence in the record to
    sustain either the implied contract claim or the chapter 93A claim.
    Moreover, the jury additionally awarded Full Spectrum $350,000 in
    punitive damages, and predicated the punitive damages solely on
    the finding that Forte's chapter 93A violation was knowing and
    willful.     Thus, the parties agree that the entire judgment --
    encompassing the award of both actual and punitive damages -- can
    stand so long as the chapter 93A verdict can stand.    We therefore
    focus on whether the record provides sufficient support for the
    jury's verdict on that claim.
    Chapter 93A makes unlawful "unfair or deceptive acts or
    practices in the conduct of any trade or commerce."      Mass. Gen.
    - 7 -
    Laws ch. 93A § 2. Section 11 of the statute extends its protections
    to business entities.       
    Id. at §§
    9, 11.      Chapter 93A does not
    define what constitutes an unfair or deceptive act or practice.
    And, though "the boundaries of what may qualify for consideration
    as a [chapter 93A] violation is a question of law," "whether a
    particular set of acts, in their factual setting, is unfair or
    deceptive is a question of fact."        Commercial Union Ins. Co. v.
    Seven Provinces Ins. Co., 
    217 F.3d 33
    , 39 (1st Cir. 2000) (quoting
    Schwanbeck v. Fed. Mogul Corp., 
    578 N.E.2d 789
    , 803-04 (Mass. App.
    Ct. 1991)).
    To determine whether conduct is unfair, the finder of
    fact must assess whether the conduct "falls 'within at least the
    penumbra   of   some   common-law,   statutory,   or   other   established
    concept of unfairness'; 'is immoral, unethical, oppressive, or
    unscrupulous'; and 'causes substantial injury to consumers.'"
    Walsh v. TelTech Sys., Inc., 
    821 F.3d 155
    , 160 (1st Cir. 2016)
    (quoting PMP Assocs., Inc. v. Globe Newspaper Co., 
    321 N.E.2d 915
    , 917 (Mass. 1975)).        And to determine whether conduct is
    deceptive, the finder of fact must assess whether the conduct
    "possesses a tendency to deceive" and "could reasonably be found
    to have caused a person to act differently from the way he [or
    she] otherwise would have acted."        Walsh v. TelTech Sys., Inc.,
    
    821 F.3d 155
    , 160 (1st Cir. 2016) (alteration in original) (quoting
    Aspinall v. Philip Morris Cos., 
    813 N.E.2d 476
    , 486 (Mass. 2004)).
    - 8 -
    B.
    Full Spectrum contends that the record suffices to show
    that Forte knowingly and intentionally violated chapter 93A in a
    number of ways.3         We focus on only one of these ways here, in which
    Full       Spectrum   contends    that    Forte      violated     chapter    93A    by
    intentionally "stringing along" Full Spectrum for Forte's benefit
    and to Full Spectrum's detriment.              See Greenstein v. Flatley, 
    474 N.E.2d 1130
    , 1133-34 (Mass. App. Ct. 1985) (finding a chapter 93A
    violation        where     defendants       engaged      in     a       "pattern    of
    conduct . . . calculated to misrepresent the true situation to the
    plaintiff, keep him on a string, and make the plaintiff conclude
    -- reasonably -- that [a] deal had been made"); see also Mass. Eye
    and Ear Infirmary v. QLT Phototherapeutics, Inc., 
    552 F.3d 47
    , 69-
    70 (1st Cir. 2009) (explaining that "stringing along a counterparty
    to   induce     detrimental      reliance      can   constitute     a    chapter   93A
    violation" because "Massachusetts cases . . . recognize a need to
    police negotiations -- even those among relatively sophisticated
    parties -- to ensure that they are not unfair or deceptive"
    (citation omitted)).
    Specifically, Full Spectrum contends that the record
    supports the finding that Forte deliberately delayed and failed to
    3
    To the extent that Forte contends that the jury's chapter
    93A verdict is necessarily based on there having been a contract
    in place that was breached, there is nothing in the jury
    - 9 -
    sign the Work Order, while taking steps to induce Full Spectrum to
    believe that Forte would sign it.       And, Full Spectrum goes on to
    argue, the record also supports the finding that Forte then
    attempted to leverage Full Spectrum's financial exposure through
    the work it had done in order to coerce Full Spectrum into signing
    Forte's Purchase Order, which contained terms adverse to Full
    Spectrum relative to the terms that would have been binding had
    the Work Order been signed.   We agree.
    First, the record shows that Forte was aware that Full
    Spectrum expected Forte to sign the Work Order from the very
    beginning of the relationship between Full Spectrum and Forte.
    From its first email to Forte on April 16, Full Spectrum made clear
    to Forte that the two of them would "need to get" the Work Order
    in place.   In that email, Full Spectrum explained, "[W]e will have
    to start with a 'block' Work Order expressing engineering time and
    budget in order to allow us to continue to make progress while
    preparing the estimate based upon the updated requirements."
    The record also provides support for finding that Forte
    knew both that, unless the Work Order was signed, the CSA would
    instructions that supports this argument.       In any event, the
    argument is waived, as Forte failed to include it in Forte's motion
    under Rule 50(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure for
    judgment as a matter of law. See 
    Jones, 780 F.3d at 487
    (a failure
    to raise a challenge in a pre-verdict Rule 50(a) motion for
    judgment as a matter of law results in a waiver of that issue on
    appeal).
    - 10 -
    not take effect -- even if separately signed -- and that the CSA
    contained terms that were important to Full Spectrum and favorable
    to it.   Indeed, the District Court in this case found (in an
    earlier ruling on the parties' cross-motions for partial summary
    judgment), and neither party contests, that the CSA did not, on
    its own, constitute an enforceable contract because -- rather than
    specifying the terms of the agreement -- the CSA was designed to
    incorporate such terms by reference to the Work Order.          For
    example, the CSA did not identify the project at issue, instead
    providing that "Full Spectrum shall perform the service for the
    project identified in the Work Order which is attached hereto."
    And Full Spectrum made it clear to Forte from its first email to
    Forte that Full Spectrum would "need to get our Consulting Services
    Agreement (CSA) in place along with a Work Order."
    These aspects of the record are significant for the
    following reason.   The record supportably shows that, even though
    Forte was aware that Full Spectrum expected Forte to sign the Work
    Order from the beginning, Forte had no intention of doing so.   And
    yet, the record supportably shows, rather than informing Full
    Spectrum at any point that it had concerns with the Work Order,
    Forte actually took actions to induce Full Spectrum to conclude
    otherwise so that it would continue working for Forte.
    In particular, on May 3, 2012, Toby Henderson and Andrew
    Dallas, the presidents of Forte and Full Spectrum, respectively,
    - 11 -
    met in person.   At that meeting, Forte signed Full Spectrum's CSA.
    But while the signing of the CSA could reasonably have been
    understood to indicate that Forte intended to then sign the Work
    Order, Forte's president, Toby Henderson, testified at trial that
    he in fact had no such intention.          Rather, he testified that the
    reason he signed the CSA was because a representative from ProTom
    "was in the next room" and Henderson felt pressure to report to
    ProTom that he had a subcontractor working on the project.
    Then, in the weeks following the May 3 meeting at which
    the CSA had been signed, Full Spectrum continued to request that
    Forte sign the Work Order.        Forte, however, failed to respond to
    Full Spectrum's repeated requests, even though evidence in the
    record shows that Forte knew that Full Spectrum was continuing to
    work on the project.
    Finally, the record shows that Full Spectrum eventually
    informed Forte that Full Spectrum would have to leave the project
    if it did not receive the signed Work Order.              At that point,
    Forte's Project Manager, Ed Roman, responded with an affirmative
    assurance that Forte would sign the Work Order.             Specifically,
    Roman promised Full Spectrum that Forte would send the signed Work
    Order by the morning of May 14, 2012.          But, notwithstanding that
    statement, on May 14, Forte did not send Full Spectrum the signed
    Work Order. Forte instead sent Full Spectrum a copy of Forte's own
    Purchase   Order,   which   was   materially    less   favorable   to   Full
    - 12 -
    Spectrum than Full Spectrum's CSA and Work Order.               It was at that
    point that Full Spectrum pulled out of the project.
    Drawing   "all   reasonable       inferences    in    favor   of   the
    verdict," 
    Astro-Med, 591 F.3d at 13
    , we conclude that a jury
    reasonably could find the following.           Forte was aware from the
    first day of its relationship with Full Spectrum that Full Spectrum
    intended for the CSA and Work Order together to constitute the
    contract between the parties.       Forte was also aware that the CSA
    on its own would not become an enforceable contract unless Forte
    signed both documents.     But, even though Forte had no intention of
    being bound by the CSA, Forte chose to string Full Spectrum along
    for several weeks by signing the CSA and telling Full Spectrum
    that it would also sign the Work Order without ever doing so.                And
    then, at the last moment, and with no attempt at discussion or
    negotiation, Forte substituted Full Spectrum's Work Order with
    Forte's own Purchase Order, which was materially less favorable to
    Full Spectrum.
    Thus,   while    Forte    contends    that     this    case   is   not
    "anything more than a dispute over whether money was owed," which
    would not give rise to a violation of chapter 93A, see Duclersaint
    v. Fed. Nat'l Mortg. Ass'n, 
    696 N.E.2d 536
    , 540 (Mass. 1998), a
    jury could reasonably find that Forte had strung Full Spectrum
    along in order to take advantage of Full Spectrum's financial
    exposure in its attempt to replace the terms in Full Spectrum's
    - 13 -
    CSA with the terms in Forte's Purchase Order.           Accordingly, we
    reject Forte's challenge to the District Court's denial of Forte's
    motion for judgment as a matter of law.
    In so holding, we recognize that Section 11 of chapter
    93A subjects businesses to "a stricter standard than consumers in
    terms of what constitutes unfair or deceptive conduct."         Giuffrida
    v. High Country Inv'r, Inc., 
    897 N.E.2d 82
    , 95 (Mass. App. Ct.
    2008); see also 
    Buster, 783 N.E.2d at 413
    ("[T]he market is a rough
    and tumble place where a competitor's lack of courtesy, generosity,
    or respect is neither uncommon nor in itself unlawful.").             But,
    one business's stringing along of another to the other's detriment
    can satisfy that stricter standard.      See Greenstein, 19 Mass. App.
    Ct. at 358 (affirming chapter 93A judgment where the stringing
    along of sophisticated plaintiff, an accounting firm, went "beyond
    the toleration even of persons inured to the rough and tumble of
    the world of commerce").     And, here, a reasonable jury could have
    found that Forte's conduct violated even the heightened standard
    that applies to conduct between business entities under chapter
    93A.
    Finally,   while    Forte   contends   that   there   was    not
    sufficient evidence to support the jury's imposition of punitive
    damages on the chapter 93A claim because Full Spectrum failed to
    show that Forte's violation of chapter 93A was knowing and willful,
    Forte failed to argue that its chapter 93A violation was not
    - 14 -
    knowing and willful in its Rule 50(a) pre-verdict motion for
    judgment as a matter of law.    Thus, the issue is waived.   Costa–
    Urena v. Segarra, 
    590 F.3d 18
    , 26 n.4 (1st Cir. 2009) ("It is well-
    established that arguments not made in a motion for judgment as a
    matter of law under Rule 50(a) cannot then be advanced in a renewed
    motion for judgment as a matter of law under Rule 50(b).").
    III.
    We now turn to the aspect of Forte's argument that relies
    on Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 39(c), which prohibits courts
    from submitting claims to a binding jury in the absence of the
    defendant's consent unless those claims are triable by jury as of
    right.   The parties agree that Rule 39(c) permitted the District
    Court to submit the chapter 93A claim to a binding jury over
    Forte's objection only if chapter 93A claims are triable to a jury
    as of right in federal court under the federal Constitution.4
    Forte therefore rests its argument to us on the same ground that
    it pressed below: that the Seventh Amendment does not guarantee a
    right to trial by jury for chapter 93A claims in federal courts.5
    4 The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court has held that there
    is neither a statutory right to a jury trial nor a constitutional
    right to a jury trial under the Massachusetts state constitution
    for a claim under chapter 93A. Nei v. Burley, 
    446 N.E.2d 674
    ,
    677-79 (Mass. 1983).
    5 In submitting the case to the jury over Forte's objection,
    the District Court did not explicitly hold that Full Spectrum had
    a Seventh Amendment right to a jury trial for its chapter 93A
    - 15 -
    As Forte brings only a legal challenge under Rule 39(c) to the
    District Court's ruling that Full Spectrum was entitled to a jury
    trial as of right, we review that ruling de novo.   See Mile High
    Indus. v. Cohen, 
    222 F.3d 845
    , 855 & n.8 (10th Cir. 2000).
    A Rule 39 error is harmless where "only one reasonable
    verdict was possible from the evidence," but is not harmless "[i]n
    close cases" where "the losing parties' right to appellate review
    can be prejudiced."   Troy v. City of Hampton, 
    756 F.2d 1000
    , 1003
    (4th Cir. 1985).   But here, it is not clear from the record that
    "only one reasonable conclusion was possible from the evidence,"
    such that "the district judge would not have been justified in
    disregarding the jury's verdict."   See Dombeck v. Milwaukee Valve
    Co., 
    40 F.3d 230
    , 237 (7th Cir. 1994).   Thus, Forte contends that
    if we agree it was an error to try the case by jury over Forte's
    objection, we must vacate and remand so that the District Court
    may enter its own findings of fact and conclusions of law on the
    basis of the evidence adduced at the trial that was held.    See 
    id. (ordering the
    case be "remanded for factfinding by the judge
    claim. But the record shows -- and the parties agree -- that the
    District Court gave the case to a binding jury, not an advisory
    one.   Accordingly, we understand the District Court's summary
    denial of Forte's opposition to Full Spectrum's motion for a jury,
    in which Forte argued that Full Spectrum did not have a Seventh
    Amendment right to a jury trial, to have impliedly found that such
    a right obtains.
    - 16 -
    independent of the jury's verdict").     Accordingly, we turn to the
    merits of the Seventh Amendment issue.6
    The Jury Trial Clause of the Seventh Amendment provides
    that "[i]n Suits at common law, where the value in controversy
    shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be
    preserved."   U.S. Const. amend. VII.    The phrase "suits at common
    law" refers not only to causes of action that existed in 1791,
    when the Seventh Amendment was adopted, but also to new causes of
    action created by statute, as long as those statutes "create[]
    legal rights and remedies, enforceable in an action for damages in
    the ordinary courts of law."   Curtis v. Loether, 
    415 U.S. 189
    , 192
    (1974).   To determine whether a statute "creates legal rights and
    remedies, enforceable in an action for damages in the ordinary
    courts of law," we undertake a three-part inquiry.
    First, we "compare the new statutory action to 18th-
    century actions brought in the courts of England prior to the
    merger of the courts of law and equity."       Braunstein v. McCabe,
    
    571 F.3d 108
    , 118 (1st Cir. 2009) (quoting Granfinanciera, S.A. v.
    Nordberg, 
    492 U.S. 33
    , 42 (1989)).      We do so to determine whether
    the current action is "analogous to common-law causes of action
    6 Full Spectrum does not argue that the Rule 39 issue has been
    waived in consequence of Forte's failure to raise the issue at any
    point after its initial objection.
    - 17 -
    ordinarily decided in English law courts in the late 18th century."
    
    Id. Second, we
    "examine the remedy sought and determine
    whether it is legal or equitable in nature.      This stage of the
    analysis is more important than the first stage."      
    Id. (quoting Granfinanciera,
    492 U.S. at 42).
    Finally, if the first two inquiries indicate that a party
    has a jury trial right, we need to undertake one more.      We must
    determine if Congress has "assigned resolution of the relevant
    claim to a non-Article III adjudicative body that does not use a
    jury as factfinder," such as the Bankruptcy Court.    
    Id. (quoting Granfinanciera,
    492 U.S. at 42).     For, if Congress has done so,
    then we must assess whether the legal claim at issue is a "private
    or a public right" in order to determine whether the legislative
    assignment is permissible.   
    Id. Here, it
    is only the first inquiry that is at issue.
    For, although some types of money damages, such as restitutionary
    damages, may be equitable, "the relief sought here -- actual and
    punitive damages -- is the traditional form of relief offered in
    the courts of law."   
    Curtis, 415 U.S. at 196
    .     Nor is there any
    issue regarding the third inquiry.      Thus, we need focus only on
    whether chapter 93A is analogous to those causes of action that
    could have been tried in courts of law, rather than in courts of
    equity, in late 18th-century England.
    - 18 -
    Chapter 93A is a catch-all statute that makes unlawful
    "[u]nfair methods of competition and unfair or deceptive acts or
    practices in the conduct of any trade or commerce."         Mass. Gen.
    Laws ch. 93A, § 2 (emphases added).          As each of chapter 93A's
    constituent parts is itself distinct, a chapter 93A claim may be
    predicated on an underlying claim of unfair methods of competition,
    unfair acts or practices, or deceptive acts or practices.          See
    Serv. Publ'ns, Inc. v. Goverman, 
    487 N.E.2d 520
    , 527 (Mass. 1986)
    ("The jury could have found [the defendant's] business practices
    to be unfair without being deceptive or fraudulent.").
    It is possible that, where a claim is brought under a
    particular constituent part of chapter 93A, the proper approach to
    the Seventh Amendment inquiry would be to determine whether there
    was an analogous common-law cause of action in English courts of
    the late 18th century.       See John T. Montgomery & Sarah E. Wald,
    The Right to Trial by Jury in c. 93A Actions, 
    67 Mass. L
    . Rev. 79,
    83 (1982).     But here, the jury was instructed to consider this
    chapter 93A claim as one undifferentiated whole, and Forte does
    not ask us to treat it otherwise. We thus evaluate Full Spectrum's
    chapter 93A claim in the aggregate.       And, considered that way, the
    cause of action at issue appears to be encompassed by the Seventh
    Amendment.
    Specifically,   Full   Spectrum's    chapter   93A   claim
    necessarily encompassed a claim for "deception," which does appear
    - 19 -
    to be a claim that is analogous to 18th-century actions at law,
    such as fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation.                See, e.g., Pasley
    and   Another   v.   Freeman   (1789)   100    Eng.   Rep.   450   (claim   for
    misrepresentation and deceit brought as an action at law in the
    Court of King's Bench); see also In re Evangelist, 
    760 F.2d 27
    , 32
    (1st Cir. 1985) (Breyer, J.) (misrepresentation is "a classical
    tort action brought 'at law'"); 3 William Blackstone, Commentaries
    *432 ("[E]very kind of fraud is equally cognizable, and equally
    adverted to, in a court of law" as in a court of equity, "and some
    frauds are only cognizable [in a court of law], as fraud in
    obtaining a devise of lands.").         That fact is significant because
    the Supreme Court has explained that, where a cause of action
    "encompasses both equitable and legal issues[,] [t]he first part
    of [the] Seventh Amendment inquiry . . . leaves [courts] in
    equipoise,"      Chauffeurs, Teamsters & Helpers, Local No. 391 v.
    Terry, 
    494 U.S. 558
    , 570 (1990), thereby making dispositive the
    other two inquiries.       And, as we have explained, each of these
    inquiries favors Full Spectrum in this case.                Thus, the Seventh
    Amendment would appear to encompass the claim that the jury heard
    here, whether or not a claim under chapter 93A for "unfair" conduct
    -- like one for deception -- also is properly analogized to claims
    traditionally tried in courts of law.           But see Allan Farnsworth,
    Farnsworth      on   Contracts   §     4.28,    at    580    (3d   ed.   2004)
    - 20 -
    ("[U]nconscionability was historically a matter for equity where
    there was no jury.").
    Moreover, in asking us to reverse the District Court,
    Forte offers no developed argument as to why we should conclude
    that an undifferentiated chapter 93A claim is analogous to a claim
    that would have been tried in a court of equity in late 18th-
    century England and not to one that would have been tried in a
    court of law.      Forte does appear to imply that Full Spectrum's
    claim is not of this latter type in asserting that "equitable
    claims are to be tried by the Court unless both parties consent to
    a jury trial."     But that passing assertion is not remotely close
    to a developed argument that a chapter 93A claim is necessarily
    analogous to an equitable one, at least when considered in the
    aggregate.     Thus, any such argument is waived. See United States
    v. Zannino, 
    895 F.2d 1
    , 17 (1st Cir. 1990).
    Forte does assert in conclusory fashion that there is no
    right to a jury trial on chapter 93A claims because chapter 93A
    "created new substantive rights in which conduct heretofore lawful
    under common and statutory law is now unlawful."    But, it is clear
    that a statute which creates a new right may still trigger a jury
    trial right.     Such a statutory right need only be analogous to a
    cause of action traditionally triable by the courts of law to fall
    within the Seventh Amendment's ambit.       See 
    Curtis, 415 U.S. at 193-94
    (holding that the Seventh Amendment does apply to actions
    - 21 -
    enforcing newly enacted statutory rights so long as they are
    "analogous" to those that could have been brought at law in 18th-
    century England).    And, as we have noted, Forte makes no developed
    argument as to why a chapter 93A claim is not so analogous.    Thus,
    in pressing this argument, Forte again provides us with no reason
    to reverse the ruling below regarding Rule 39.
    Forte's final argument is that our controlling precedent
    holds that chapter 93A claims are not encompassed by the Seventh
    Amendment.    But, this argument, though developed, fails because it
    relies upon a misreading of our precedent.
    To be sure, Forte is right that in Wallace Motor Sales,
    Inc. v. American Motor Sales Corp., 
    780 F.2d 1049
    , 1063-64 (1st
    Cir. 1985), we did reference the Supreme Judicial Court's decision
    in Nei v. Burley, 
    446 N.E.2d 674
    (Mass. 1983), which held that
    there is no right to a jury trial for chapter 93A actions under
    the Massachusetts Constitution.7     And, in doing so, we did state
    that "the reasoning employed by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial
    Court in Nei is determinative of the [S]eventh [A]mendment issue."
    7 Despite the fact that there is no state constitutional right
    to trial by jury in chapter 93A cases in Massachusetts courts,
    "the jury trial of chapter 93A cases became routine and continues
    to this day," as "justices of the Superior Court went right on
    trying chapter 93A cases to a jury whenever related contractual or
    tort claims deserved such a trial and where it served judicial
    efficiency."    Mass. Eye & Ear Infirmary v. QLT, Inc., 
    495 F. Supp. 2d 188
    , 194 (D. Mass. 2007), aff'd in part, vacated in
    part, Mass. Eye & Ear Infirmary, 
    552 F.3d 47
    .
    - 22 -
    But,   our   subsequent   precedent   has   made   clear   that
    Wallace is not determinative of the Seventh Amendment question.
    In particular, in Frappier v. Countrywide Home Loans, Inc., 
    750 F.3d 91
    , 97 (1st Cir. 2014), we explained that the statement in
    Wallace on which Forte relies was dicta because the parties in
    Wallace had stipulated that claims under chapter 93A do not command
    a right to a jury trial.    
    Id. (citing Wallace,
    780 F.2d at 1064).
    Frappier also explained that Nei offered a construction of the
    jury trial right under the Massachusetts Constitution, not the
    Seventh Amendment to the federal Constitution, and "a litigant's
    right to a jury under the Seventh Amendment for state-law claims
    in federal court is a matter of federal, not state, law."            Id.;
    see also Simler v. Conner, 
    372 U.S. 221
    , 222 (1963) (per curiam)
    ("[T]he right to a jury trial in the federal courts is to be
    determined as a matter of federal law in diversity as well as other
    actions."); Byrd v. Blue Ridge Rural Elec. Co-op., Inc., 
    356 U.S. 525
    , 538–39 (1958) (holding that Seventh Amendment right to
    jury trial in federal court may exist even with respect to a state-
    created right and even when a state statute or state constitution
    would preclude a jury trial in state court).      Thus, Frappier made
    clear that "a litigant seeking legal relief in federal court under
    chapter 93A may be entitled to a jury," "[r]egardless of any
    contrary language in Wallace."      
    Frappier, 750 F.3d at 98
    .
    - 23 -
    Forte does also cite to our more recent decision in Baker
    v. Goldman, Sachs & Co., 
    771 F.3d 37
    (1st Cir. 2014), in which we
    stated in a footnote that "[t]here is no right to trial by jury
    for claims brought under ch. 93A."        
    Id. at 48
    n.5.      But, the
    parties in Baker, like those in Wallace, did not actually raise
    the question whether there is a Seventh Amendment right to trial
    by jury for chapter 93A claims.       Rather, in that case, the jury
    decided the plaintiff's common-law claims, and the district court
    decided the plaintiff's chapter 93A claims.      
    Id. at 49.
      As such,
    Baker, like Wallace, does not decide the question.       Accordingly,
    there is no precedent from our circuit that resolves whether the
    Seventh Amendment requires that a chapter 93A claim be tried to a
    jury in federal court, and Forte's claims to the contrary are
    misplaced.
    Thus, given that Forte offers no developed, meritorious
    argument for why the District Court erred in submitting Full
    Spectrum's claim to a jury; that this chapter 93A claim was brought
    in the aggregate; and that one of its constituent parts appears to
    be analogous to the kind of tort action over which the courts at
    law traditionally had jurisdiction, we reject Forte's request for
    reversal.     We leave for another day a fuller consideration of the
    extent to which the Seventh Amendment may apply to chapter 93A
    claims.
    - 24 -
    IV.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the denial of
    Forte's motion for judgment as a matter of law and affirm the
    submission of the chapter 93A claim to the jury.
    - 25 -