SelectSun GmbH v. Porter, Inc. , 928 F.3d 550 ( 2019 )


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  •                               In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 18-3149
    SELECTSUN GMBH,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    PORTER, INC., d/b/a THUNDERBIRD PRODUCTS,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of Indiana, Fort Wayne Division.
    No. 1:14-cv-215 — Theresa L. Springmann, Chief Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED APRIL 2, 2019 — DECIDED JUNE 25, 2019
    ____________________
    Before HAMILTON, BARRETT, and SCUDDER, Circuit Judges.
    SCUDDER, Circuit Judge. Contractual disputes can be messy
    and present many tangled knots. A year ago in a similar con-
    tractual dispute under Indiana law we observed that some-
    times the harder questions can be avoided where the eviden-
    tiary record shows that the plaintiff “failed to prove its dam-
    ages with anything close to reasonable certainty.” Entertain-
    ment USA, Inc. v. Moorehead Communications, Inc., 
    897 F.3d 786
    ,
    797 (7th Cir. 2018). This same observation and evidentiary
    2                                                 No. 18-3149
    shortcoming resolves this appeal and leads us to affirm the
    district court’s judgment against SelectSun GmbH in this con-
    tract and warranty dispute over whether the exhaust system
    on a $1 million yacht manufactured by Porter, Inc. complied
    with particular regulatory requirements imposed by the Eu-
    ropean Union.
    I
    A
    Porter is an Indiana company that manufactures boats un-
    der the Formula and Thunderbird trade names. At the center
    of this dispute is a 40-foot Formula yacht custom manufac-
    tured by Porter for a German businessman and boat enthusi-
    ast, Erich Schwaiger. Only a general understanding of how
    the sale and underlying contract came about is necessary here.
    In September 2012, Schwaiger attended a boat show in
    Friedrichshafen, Germany, and met Alfred Zurhausen, the
    owner of Poker-Run-Boats, one of Porter’s international deal-
    ers of Formula boats. Impressed with a Formula display
    model, Schwaiger expressed interest in ordering a Formula
    yacht with supercharged engines and high-end accessories
    and furnishings. Shortly thereafter Zurhausen met Schwaiger
    in Munich to discuss these options and pricing in more detail.
    Those discussions culminated in Schwaiger, through one of
    his companies, executing a contract with Poker-Run-Boats on
    October 1, 2012. The yacht and a custom-built lift cost
    Schwaiger approximately $1 million. Porter, as the manufac-
    turer, was not a party to the contract. The only parties were
    Poker-Run-Boats and (following a substitution) Schwaiger’s
    company, SelectSun.
    No. 18-3149                                                   3
    By its terms, the contract required the boat to be “CE cer-
    tified,” meaning authorized for operation in the European
    Union. Porter did not manufacture the boat to meet this spec-
    ification, and the reason seems to be because of communica-
    tions during the ordering process that Porter had with one of
    its domestic dealers, International Nautic. Based in Florida,
    International Nautic had worked with Poker-Run-Boats (the
    German dealer) to receive Schwaiger’s order and, in turn, to
    transmit that order to Porter. The order conveyed by Interna-
    tional Nautic called for the yacht to come with a switchable
    exhaust system, one that would allow the operator to choose
    to divert exhaust either above or below the water line. Exhaust
    diversion above the water line results in a boat operating with
    more noise. EU regulations, however, require exhaust expul-
    sion below the water line. Porter caught this conflict and ex-
    plained to International Nautic that the boat could not be both
    equipped with the switchable exhaust system specified in the
    original order and CE certified. In the end, and following di-
    alogue on the issue, International Nautic authorized Porter to
    proceed with manufacturing the boat with the originally de-
    signed exhaust system. Apparently Schwaiger knew nothing
    of International Nautic’s decision and therefore believed the
    yacht would come CE certified.
    Schwaiger took delivery of the yacht in Germany in May
    2013. He used the boat throughout much of the 2013 season
    in Europe. (It is not clear whether he did so believing the boat
    was CE certified or knowing that it was not.) During these first
    few months, Porter covered a series of minor warranty repairs
    at no charge to Schwaiger. By the end of August, however,
    Schwaiger appeared fed up with the yacht, complaining to
    Poker-Run-Boats of problems with the boat’s engines, steer-
    4                                                  No. 18-3149
    ing column, exterior gel coating, and interior furnishings. Ra-
    ther than seek repairs, Schwaiger returned the yacht to Poker-
    Run-Boats with instructions to sell it. When the boat did not
    immediately sell, Schwaiger resorted to litigation.
    B
    In January 2014, Schwaiger’s company SelectSun, the
    party to the contract with the German dealer Poker-Run-
    Boats, filed a complaint against Porter in federal court in New
    York. SelectSun amended its complaint a month later to add
    International Nautic, Porter’s Florida dealer, as a defendant.
    On Porter’s motion, the district court in New York then trans-
    ferred venue to the Northern District of Indiana, where Porter
    is headquartered.
    SelectSun’s claims against International Nautic ended in a
    default judgment. This resulted from International Nautic
    shuttering its business in January 2015, and from there for-
    ward failing to participate in the litigation. Equally notewor-
    thy is that Porter’s German dealer, Poker-Run-Boats, ceased
    operations sometime after this litigation commenced. These
    developments left SelectSun with claims only against Porter
    as the manufacturer of the yacht.
    Summary judgment resulted in a partial ruling in Porter’s
    favor and SelectSun proceeding to trial on three particular
    claims. First, and recognizing that Porter did not sign the Oc-
    tober 2012 contract, SelectSun nonetheless sought to hold Por-
    ter liable for breach of contract under a theory of agency based
    on apparent authority. Second, SelectSun highlighted the
    damage to the yacht that Schwaiger experienced during the
    2013 season, as well as the absence of the boat being CE certi-
    fied, as part of alleging that Porter had breached express and
    No. 18-3149                                                    5
    implied warranties and likewise violated the Magnuson-
    Moss Warranty Act, 
    15 U.S.C. §§ 2301
    , et seq. Third, SelectSun
    advanced a claim of unjust enrichment. In its amended com-
    plaint, SelectSun sought damages for the full purchase price
    of the yacht, the cost of the lift, and related financing costs—a
    total exceeding $1,000,000.
    A four-day bench trial followed in the district court. Se-
    lectSun focused much of its evidence on matters of contract
    formation and, in particular, the facts pertinent to determin-
    ing whether Porter could be held to the contract terms under
    agency principles of apparent authority. The trial court, for
    example, heard substantial testimony about Schwaiger’s di-
    rect and indirect interactions with Porter personnel, other in-
    dications that Poker-Run-Boats (Porter’s German dealer) and
    International Nautic (Porter’s Florida-based dealer) acted
    with Porter’s authority, and Schwaiger’s expectations that the
    yacht would come CE certified.
    As for damages, and in keeping with the award sought in
    its amended complaint, SelectSun (and by extension
    Schwaiger) approached trial in an all-or-nothing manner: it
    sought to recover either over $1 million (reflecting the full
    purchase price of the boat, the cost of the lift, and financing
    costs) or $0—nothing in between. Put differently, SelectSun,
    despite offering expert testimony about the cause of particu-
    lar damage to the yacht, did not approach trial with a plan B
    to recover the specific costs associated with the damage the
    boat experienced during the 2013 season. Even more specifi-
    cally, SelectSun offered no evidence of the value of the yacht
    at the time of trial, the costs to repair various items like the
    cracked gel coating and damaged appliances, or the cost to
    render the yacht CE certified.
    6                                                  No. 18-3149
    For its part, Porter approached trial by offering evidence
    to explain why it did not manufacture the yacht to be CE cer-
    tified. So, too, did Porter offer competing expert testimony to
    show that the damage the yacht sustained during the 2013
    season was the product of misuse by Schwaiger. Porter also
    offered testimony that the yacht’s exhaust system could be
    modified to be compliant with the requirements for CE certi-
    fication for an estimated $2,000.
    The district court entered judgment for Porter on each of
    SelectSun’s claims. In a thorough opinion, Chief Judge
    Springmann determined that SelectSun’s breach of contract
    claims failed because Porter neither was a party to the October
    2012 contract nor could be bound to its terms by a theory of
    apparent authority. On the latter point, the district court rea-
    soned that the course of dealing between the parties “would
    not cause a reasonable person, much less a sophisticated busi-
    nessperson, to believe that Zurhausen was an agent of Por-
    ter.” As to SelectSun’s breach of warranty claims, the district
    court emphasized that Schwaiger’s all-or-nothing approach to
    damages—insisting on recovering the full purchase price of
    the boat instead of the more discrete repair costs—left him
    outside of the scope of relief available under Indiana law. Fi-
    nally, the district court rejected the unjust enrichment claim
    based on the finding that Porter received no benefit at Select-
    Sun’s (or Schwaiger’s) expense.
    Before concluding the case, and as part of quantifying the
    amount of the default judgment against International Nautic,
    the district court invited SelectSun to “provid[e] evidence es-
    timating the cost to replace the exhaust system to bring the
    Boat into compliance with EU standards.” SelectSun re-
    sponded not by supplying a cost estimate to bring the vessel
    No. 18-3149                                                    7
    into compliance with EU regulations, but instead by summar-
    ily positing that it is “impossible to assess cost of repair for
    this Boat,” because “this Boat cannot be made CE compliant
    and is a total loss.”
    II
    On appeal SelectSun devotes substantial effort to challeng-
    ing the district court’s determination that Poker-Run-Boats
    and International Nautic did not act with the apparent au-
    thority requisite to bind Porter to the October 2012 contract
    for the yacht. In much the same way, SelectSun spills mean-
    ingful ink arguing that it offered ample evidence to prove that
    Porter breached its express and implied warranties by failing
    to manufacture the watercraft to be CE certified. Along the
    way, in advancing both contentions, however, SelectSun de-
    votes little to no attention to explaining what we see as a plain
    failure of proof under Indiana law—establishing damages to
    a reasonable certainty—that independently defeats both its
    breach of warranty and breach of contract claims against Por-
    ter. It is on this alternative ground that we affirm the district
    court’s judgment in Porter’s favor. See Continental Ins. Co. v.
    M/V ORSULA, 
    354 F.3d 603
    , 606 (7th Cir. 2003) (explaining
    that “[w]e may affirm a district court’s judgment on alternate
    grounds found in the record”).
    Similar circumstances presented themselves in Entertain-
    ment USA, Inc. There we confronted a contract dispute under
    Indiana law regarding a customer referral agreement between
    a cell phone wholesaler, Entertainment USA, and Moorehead
    Communications, an agent for wireless service provider Ver-
    izon. See 897 F.3d at 789–90. The agreement required Moore-
    head to pay Entertainment USA a certain amount each time
    8                                                   No. 18-3149
    its referrals resulted in a new activation of a cell phone con-
    tract. See id. After Moorehead stopped paying, Entertainment
    USA filed suit but then in the ensuing litigation, including ul-
    timately at trial, never developed evidence (in the form of a
    traditional damages calculation or otherwise) of what Moore-
    head had paid and still owed in light of the precise breach at
    issue and terms and conditions of the governing agreement.
    Entertainment USA, the trial record showed, “presented a
    damages calculation [that] aligned with its broad theories of
    liability, but it did not present an estimate or evidence that
    could, with reasonable effort, be disaggregated and recalcu-
    lated in accordance with the district court’s much narrower
    bases for finding liability.” Id. at 791. The evidentiary short-
    coming left the district court without a reliable evidentiary ba-
    sis from which to measure and assess damages. See id.
    The failing mattered—and indeed proved dispositive—
    because, under Indiana law, a breach of contract claim re-
    quires showing the existence of a contract, the defendant’s
    breach, and damages. See id. at 793 (quoting Old Nat’l Bank v.
    Kelly, 
    31 N.E.3d 522
    , 531 (Ind. Ct. App. 2015)). The burden for
    establishing damages fell squarely on Entertainment USA,
    and the company was required to do so with evidence at trial
    “proving with reasonable certainty the damages which he in-
    curred.” See 
    id.
     (quoting Indiana Bell Tel. Co. v. O’Bryan, 
    408 N.E.2d 178
    , 183 (Ind. Ct. App. 1980)). But “Entertainment
    USA’s presentation of damages fell well short” of the eviden-
    tiary threshold—despite the district court’s offering multiple
    opportunities to do so, the company never presented an esti-
    mate of damages that aligned with Moorehead’s actual liabil-
    ity. See id. at 794. And because this failure of proof on dam-
    ages was fatal, we stopped short on appeal of wading into the
    merits of Entertainment USA’s challenge to the finding of a
    No. 18-3149                                                   9
    breach of contract, emphasizing that “[i]t is not always neces-
    sary to march through this entire process if a single issue
    proves to be dispositive.” Id. (quoting Lesch v. Crown Cork &
    Seal Co., 
    282 F.3d 467
    , 473 (7th Cir. 2002)).
    We chart the same course here. Substantial complexity ac-
    companies SelectSun’s challenges to the district court’s rul-
    ings. Take, for example, the apparent authority question and,
    specifically, whether the trial evidence showed that Porter
    was bound to the October 2012 contract by virtue of particular
    actions the company took to allow Schwaiger to reasonably
    believe that the German dealer (Poker-Run-Boats) was Por-
    ter’s agent. See Rogers v. Sigma Chi Int’l Fraternity, 
    9 N.E.3d 755
    , 764 (Ind. Ct. App. 2014) (delineating the parameters of
    apparent authority). The district court answered the question
    not only by analyzing the particulars of phone calls between
    the parties, Formula’s marketing materials, and other aspects
    of the transaction, but also by making the related legal deter-
    mination that only events before the contract signing date
    were relevant. While the district court’s conclusion that no ap-
    parent authority existed has much to support it in the record,
    SelectSun has lodged a detailed, multipronged challenge to
    that conclusion on appeal, including by contending the court
    committed legal error by limiting its focus to interactions be-
    fore the execution of the contract. The parties’ briefing on
    these factual and legal issues is extensive.
    All of this is avoidable, though, because regardless of the
    answers we would come to, the evidence presented by Select-
    Sun at trial falls well short of its burden in proving damages
    on either its breach of warranty or breach of contract claims.
    The governing principles under Indiana law are straightfor-
    10                                                   No. 18-3149
    ward. Indiana warranty law required SelectSun to present ev-
    idence of damages as to the cost of repairing the boat, replac-
    ing it, or proving its fair market value. See Irmscher Suppliers,
    Inc. v. Schuler, 
    909 N.E.2d 1040
    , 1050 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009). Like-
    wise, Indiana contract law compelled SelectSun to offer at
    trial a reasonable calculation of damages resulting from the
    breach that was “supported by evidence in the record” and
    not “the mere basis of conjecture or speculation.” R & R Real
    Estate, Co., LLC v. C & N Armstrong Farms, Ltd., 
    854 N.E.2d 365
    ,
    370–71 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006).
    Yet recall how SelectSun approached damages at trial, tak-
    ing the position that the only appropriate award was not to
    recover specific necessary repairs to the yacht, but instead to
    return the vessel’s purchase price as well as the financing
    costs and the cost of the lift—totaling approximately $1 mil-
    lion. SelectSun, in short, insisted the yacht was worth $0—lit-
    erally worthless, not even retaining scrap value—absent the
    CE certificate called for by the contract.
    There is more. At trial a Porter representative testified that
    the yacht’s exhaust system could have been made compliant
    with EU regulations for an estimated $2,000. The district court
    credited this testimony as part of finding that any warranty
    damages would not exceed that estimate, and having pre-
    sented no contrary estimate, SelectSun had no evidentiary
    ground to stand on to challenge the finding as clearly errone-
    ous.
    On this evidentiary record, we conclude that SelectSun did
    not meet its burden of proving damages to a reasonable cer-
    tainty on either its breach of contract or warranty claims. Not
    only did SelectSun decline to present affirmative evidence as
    to the cost of specific damage or the current value of the boat,
    No. 18-3149                                                   11
    it failed to rebut Porter’s evidence that the boat could be made
    CE compliant for only $2,000. While Indiana law affords some
    flexibility in proving damages, a plaintiff must come forward
    with an estimate rooted in evidence and demonstrated to a
    reasonable certainty. See Stoneburner v. Fletcher, 
    408 N.E.2d 545
    , 550–51 (Ind. Ct. App. 1980); see also Indiana Bell Tel. Co.,
    
    408 N.E.2d at 183
     (explaining “the party asserting the breach
    has the burden of proving with reasonable certainty the dam-
    ages which he incurred”). Against this standard and on this
    factual record, SelectSun failed to carry its burden in demand-
    ing a return of the yacht’s entire purchase price.
    III
    A failure of proof likewise plagued SelectSun’s claim of
    unjust enrichment. Under Indiana law, SelectSun needed to
    show that it conferred a benefit upon Porter, expected pay-
    ment in return, and yet received none—yielding an unjust re-
    sult. See Neibert v. Perdomo, 
    54 N.E.3d 1046
    , 1051 (Ind. Ct. App.
    2016). The district court found that the trial evidence demon-
    strated that this case was a poor fit for recovery on a theory of
    unjust enrichment. Porter received no benefit, much less un-
    just enrichment, by receiving partial payment for the yacht it
    manufactured and then delivered to Schwaiger. Nor did Por-
    ter bear any responsibility for, or receive any benefit from, the
    financing costs or price of the boat lift. We cannot say these
    conclusions reflect any error of fact or law.
    For these reasons, we AFFIRM.