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Case: 17-13956 Date Filed: 07/11/2019 Page: 1 of 33
[PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
________________________
Nos. 17-13956; 17-15623
________________________
D.C. Docket No. 9:16-cv-80567-WPD
PIER 1 CRUISE EXPERTS,
a Brazil corporation,
Plaintiff-Appellee-Cross-Appellant,
versus
REVELEX CORPORATION,
a Florida corporation,
Defendant-Appellant-Cross-Appellee.
________________________
Appeals from the United States District Court
for the Southern District of Florida
________________________
(July 11, 2019)
Before WILLIAM PRYOR and NEWSOM, Circuit Judges, and VRATIL, * District
Judge.
*
Honorable Kathryn H. Vratil, United States District Judge for the District of Kansas, sitting by
designation.
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NEWSOM, Circuit Judge:
Dear Florida Supreme Court: We need your help. Among other much
simpler issues, this case presents a knotty and important state-law contract question
that is more appropriately answered by you than by us. Accordingly, after clearing
away some underbrush, we will respectfully certify to you the following question:
Is a contractual âexculpatory clauseâ that purports to insulate one of
the signatories from âany ⌠damages regardless of kind or type âŚ
whether in contract, tort (including negligence), or otherwiseâ
enforceable? Or, alternatively, does the clause confer such sweeping
immunity that it renders the entire contract in which it appears
illusory? Or, finally, might the clause plausibly be construed so as to
bar some but not all claims and thus save the contract from
invalidation?
Each possibility finds at least some support in Florida law, each comes with
its own equitable pros and cons, and each has dramatically different implications
for the case before us.
I
A
Pier 1 Cruise Experts is a Brazilian travel agency that specializes in cruises
and cruise packages. Pier 1 sells both through sub-agenciesâapproximately 300
individual travel agencies located around Brazilâand directly to customers.
Hoping to grow its business, Pier 1 wanted a first-of-its-kind website with an
online distribution channel for booking options in Portuguese and payment in
Brazilian reais.
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To build the website, Pier 1 hired Revelex Corporation, a Florida-based
company that provides customized software to travel companies. Revelex
promised to deliver on each of Pier 1âs requirementsâcontent in Portuguese,
prices in reais, and sub-agent booking capabilitiesâand indicated that, once work
started, the website software could be completed in approximately six months.
Almost a year later, following multiple rounds of negotiations, the two
companies executed a Service Agreement. The Service Agreement was dated
August 6, 2013âfor reasons weâll explain, the date could turn out to matterâand
in general, it stated that Revelex would provide Pier 1 access to a proprietary
booking engine in exchange for licensing fees. Section 12 of the Service
Agreement, titled âLimitation of Liability,â is at the heart of this litigation, so weâll
pause to take a closer look at its three constituent provisions. First, and most
importantly here, § 12.1 sets forth an unusually broad exculpatory clause. In
relevant part, that clause reads as follows:
Revelex shall not be liable ⌠for any direct, special, indirect,
incidental, consequential, punitive, exemplary or any other damages
regardless of kind or type (whether in contract, tort (including
negligence), or otherwise), including but not limited to loss of profits,
data, or goodwill, regardless of whether Revelex knew or should have
known of the possibility of such damages âŚ. Customer waives any
and all claims, now known or later discovered, that it may have
against Revelex and its licensors and vendors arising out of this
agreement and the services.
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Second, § 12.2 provides that â[i]n any event, Revelexâs total cumulative
liability to customer or any third party for all damages, losses, and causes of action
(whether in contract, tort (including negligence), or otherwise) relating in any way
to this agreement exceed one hundred dollars ($100.00).â If § 12.2 seems a little
clunky, thatâs because it is. No matter how you read it, the grammar just doesnât
work, and the parties here dispute whether the provision is missing a âshall notâ
between the words âagreementâ and âexceed.â Finally, § 12.3 states, in relevant
part, that â[t]he limitations of liability and disclaimers of warranties provided in
this agreement form an essential basis of the bargain between the parties.â
Separately (but alongside) the Service Agreement, the parties also negotiated
and executed a Scope of Work, which weâll (inelegantly) call the âSOW.â The
SOW memorialized the necessary customizations for the website and indicated that
the total cost of the software was $100,097. It explained that the website would
entail two primary componentsâa business-to-business feature that would allow
travel agents to book and manage cruise reservations, and a direct-to-consumer
feature that would enable customers to book and pay for cruises online. Notablyâ
and potentially importantly, for reasons weâll explainâthe Service Agreement and
the SOW included reciprocal cross-references. Section 5.1 of the Service
Agreement contemplated that the parties would âenter into written Statement(s) of
Work ⌠for the performance of certain professional services by Revelex.â Section
4
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7 of the SOW, in turn, stated that it was âissued pursuant to the terms and
conditions of the Contractââi.e., the Service Agreementâand that âthe services
set forth within this [SOW] are within the scope of the services authorized in the
Contract.â Also notablyâagain, for reasons that will become clearâdiscussions
concerning the SOW overlapped the negotiations and execution of the Service
Agreement; the parties began conferring about the SOW on April 22, 2013,
executed the Service Agreement on August 6, 2013, and then finalized the SOW
on January 15, 2014.
As of December 2015, the software still wasnât complete. Pier 1 ceased
making its ongoing licensing payments, and Revelex terminated Pier 1âs access to
the software.
B
Pier 1 sued Revelex in the Southern District of Florida, raising four claims:
breach of contract, fraudulent misrepresentation, negligent misrepresentation, and
unjust enrichment. Pier 1 eventually dropped its fraudulent-misrepresentation and
unjust-enrichment claims, so we focus here on breach of contract and negligent
misrepresentation.
The parties filed dueling motions for summary judgment, each contending
that § 12.1 of the Service Agreement should be read in its favor. For its part,
Revelex argued that the exculpatory clauseâwhich, again, purported to shield it
5
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from âany ⌠damages regardless of kind or type ⌠whether in contract, tort
(including negligence), or otherwiseââbarred Pier 1âs claims. The breadth of the
clauseâs language, Revelexâs president explained in his deposition, was intentional:
âRevelex is priced in the manner with which we cannot afford to take on any
liability. It is a pay-as-you-go service. So the customers that use our service
benefit from paying less. What that means is that we are not going to be
financially liable. Your remedy with us is to not do business with us.â
Alternatively, Revelex asked the district court to correct a scrivenerâs error in §
12.2âso as to insert the phantom âshall notââand cap its exposure at $100, or, as
a last resort, to construe the exculpatory clause to limit its liability to direct
damages only. Finally, Revelex asserted that the SOW couldnât stand
independently of the Service Agreement and, therefore, that Pier 1âs SOW-based
claims provided no stand-alone basis for relief.
Pier 1, by contrast, principally asserted that the Service Agreementâs broad
exculpatory clause rendered the contract unenforceable against Revelex and thus
illusory. Separately, and in response to Revelex, Pier 1âs managing director
testified that he believed § 12.1 merely shielded Revelex from liability to third
parties for damages caused by Pier 1 or its sub-agencies. As for § 12.2, he testified
that it actually limited Pier 1 to seeking damages in excess of $100âwhich, he
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said, âseemed reasonableâ because âany problems less than $100 would not be
worth pursuing.â
The district court granted partial summary judgment for Pier 1 and held that,
as a matter of law, the exculpatory clause rendered the entire Service Agreement
illusory. As the court explained it, âthe Service Agreement binds [Pier 1] to
perform certain duties,â but Revelex âis free to breach the contract because there
will never be recourse for the breachâ; accordingly, the court concluded, the
âarrangement does not create a binding contract.â Without mutuality of obligation,
the court reasoned, âthere is no valid contract and neither side may be bound.â The
court refused to reform or sever § 12.1, because it said that it could not âre-write or
sever th[e] provision in a way that would achieve the intent of the parties.â
Both parties sought clarification with respect to whether the SOW was part
and parcel of the (now nonexistent) Service Agreement or, instead, survived
independently. The district court issued a supplemental order reiterating that the
entire Service Agreement was unenforceable both (1) because § 12.1 rendered the
contract illusory, and (2) in the alternative, because it was âan unenforceable
agreement to agree.â The court clarified, though, that its earlier order âdidnât
speak to the claim for breach of contract related to the SOW,â which the court
explained survived as a separate contract independent of the Service Agreement.
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The case then proceeded to trial on a SOW-related breach-of-contract claim
and a negligent-misrepresentation claim. At trial, Pier 1 presented a live
demonstration of the software, which revealed that key functionalities were never
completed. For example, Pier 1 showed that although the website logged more
than 10,000 visits, not a single potential customer was able to purchase a cruise.
Revelex nonetheless asserted that it had satisfied its contractual obligationsâ
pointing, for instance, to an email from Pier 1âs principal stating that âIâm hereby
to confirm that all services described on SOW were done.â Pier 1 countered that it
sent the email because Revelex had requested it for its auditorsânot because Pier
1 actually believed that Revelex had fulfilled its contractual duties.
Through its financial manager, Mariana Peres, Pier 1 presented damages
evidence pertaining to alleged lost profits. Using Pier 1âs financial reports and
general economic conditions, Peres determined that Pier 1âs expected revenue
during the damages period was $12.7 million. She estimated that total expenses
would have increased by 10% annually over the same timeframe, and then
compared that to the inflation rate in Brazil. Peres calculated that, on average,
each cruise that Pier 1 sold generated $1,000 in revenue. Pier 1 was selling 50
cruises per month before the advent of online booking capabilities, Peres said, and
she estimated that a properly functioning website would have increased sales by at
least 100 cruises per month, to a total of 150.
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Having heard Peresâs testimony, the district court asked her to clarify her
methodology. When Peres explained that her estimates were based, in part, on the
e-commerce market in Brazil, Revelex objected that she, as a lay witness, was
impermissibly offering expert testimony. The court held that although Peres could
âgive an opinion as to what her company is worth, or what the expenses were,â it
was âtoo speculativeâ for her to âpick a number out of thin airâ and determine that
sales would double âbased on looking on the internet and looking at e-commerce.â
Because Pier 1 introduced no additional evidence pertaining to lost profits, the
court granted judgment as a matter of law for Revelex with respect to Pier 1âs lost-
profits claim.
Pier 1âs SOW-based breach-of-contract claim and its negligent-
misrepresentation claim were submitted to the jury. The jury found that Revelex
(1) breached the SOW and (2) made negligent misrepresentations to Pier 1. It
awarded Pier 1 $100,097 in damagesâthe software cost as specified in the SOW.
Because the district court had concluded that the Service Agreement was voidâ
and because there was therefore no valid contract clause on which to predicate
attorneysâ feesâit denied Pier 1âs request for $485,779.50 in fees.
Revelex appealed the district courtâs entry of judgment against it, and Pier 1
cross-appealed the courtâs rejection of its lost-profits claim and its fee request.
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II
Thereâs a lot going on here. We have an appeal and a cross appeal, and
together the parties have presented a series of interconnecting issues. Three of
those issues are pretty straightforward, and we feel well-equipped to decide them.
The fourth issue, howeverâin candor, the biggest and hardest oneâis better
resolved by the Florida Supreme Court than by us, and so we will certify it. 1
A
We can make relatively quick work of three issues: (1) Revelexâs contention
that the district court erred in concluding that the SOW is independent of, and
therefore survived that courtâs invalidation of, the Service Agreement; (2) Pier 1âs
contention that the district court erred in rejecting its claim for lost profits; and (3)
Pier 1âs contention that it is entitled to recover attorneysâ fees. In short, we reject
all three arguments.
1
First up: The district court held that the SOW was an independent, stand-
alone contract that survived Service Agreementâs demise. Revelex disagrees; it
says that the SOW is bound up with the Service Agreement and therefore must fall
1
We review de novo questions of contract interpretation, Hegal v. First Liberty Ins. Corp., 778
F.3d 1214, 1219 (11th Cir. 2015), as well as a district courtâs entry of judgment as a matter of
law, Connelly v. Metro. Atlanta Rapid Transit Auth., 764 F.3d 1358, 1363 (11th Cir. 2014). As
the parties agree, Florida law governs the contracts between Pier 1 and Revelex.
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with it. Revelex has a pretty good story to tell, and if we were writing on a clean
slate we might be inclined to agree that the district court erred in treating the SOW
as wholly independent of the Service Agreement. But for reasons weâll explain,
we arenât, and so we canât.
Under Florida law, â[d]ocuments executed by the same parties, on or near
the same time, and concerning the same transaction or subject matter are generally
construed together as a single contract.â Quix Snaxx, Inc. v. Sorensen, 710 So. 2d
152, 153 (Fla. 3d Dist. Ct. App. 1998). Moreover, â[w]here a writing expressly
refers to and sufficiently describes another document, the other document, or so
much of it as is referred to, is to be interpreted as part of the writing.â Id. (citing
United States Rubber Prods., Inc. v. Clark, 200 So. 385, 388 (Fla. 1941)).
Applying those principles here would seem to suggest that the SOW is
indeed part and parcel of the Service Agreement. As we have explained, the two
contracts were negotiated and executed during the same basic timeframe. The
chronology, again, is essentially as follows: Pier 1 and Revelex began negotiating
the Service Agreement in mid-2012, commenced negotiations on the SOW in April
2013, executed the Service Agreement in August 2013, and finalized the SOW in
January 2014. Whatâs more, the two contracts cross-reference one another, further
suggesting interdependency. Section 5 of the Service Agreement expressly
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contemplates âStatement(s) of Work,â and § 7 of the SOW provides that it was
âissued pursuant to the terms and conditions ofâ the Service Agreement.
The problem for Revelex, and itâs a fatal one, is that it has waived any
argument that the SOW canât stand aloneâor, what amounts to the same thing, it
invited the district courtâs error in concluding otherwise, or is judicially estopped
from now contesting that courtâs determination. At trial, when it sought judgment
as a matter of law on Pier 1âs unjust-enrichment claim, Revelex expressly
conceded that the SOW was a valid agreement. Hereâs the full colloquy:
[REVELEXâS COUNSEL]: Judge, thereâs three theories that âŚ
currently exist. ⌠Thereâs a breach of contract relative to the scope of
work, negligent misrepresentation, and a third alternative theory on
unjust enrichment. Under the law, if there is a contract, there canât,
by definition, be unjust enrichment.
I think, in all fairness, thereâs been an established contract in the scope
of work, and weâre no longer contesting that the scope of work is not
a contract. Therefore, if there isâthe question is gonna be whether
thereâs a breach of that contract âŚ.
THE COURT: So, what youâre saying is, I can tell the jury that a valid
contract was entered, and if I do that, then it eliminates the unjust
enrichment alternative?
[REVELEXâS COUNSEL]: Yes, Judge.
Based on its stipulation that the SOW had survived as a valid contract, the
district court granted Revelexâs motion for judgment as a matter of law and
dismissed Pier 1âs unjust-enrichment claim. Having led the district court down the
primrose pathâand, in doing so, having succeeded in knocking out one of Pier 1âs
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three remaining claimsâRevelex cannot now ask us to hold the district court in
error for following. See Pensacola Motor Sales Inc. v. Eastern Shore Toyota, LLC,
684 F.3d 1211, 1231 (11th Cir. 2012) (âA party that invites an error cannot
complain when its invitation is accepted.â); cf. also New Hampshire v. Maine, 532
U.S. 742, 749 (2001) (âWhere a party assumes a certain position in a legal
proceeding, and succeeds in maintaining that position, he may not thereafter,
simply because his interests have changed, assume a contrary position, especially if
it be to the prejudice of the party who has acquiesced in the position formerly taken
by him.â (alteration adopted) (citation omitted)).
However strong its position may be that the Service Agreement and the
SOW should rise or (more accurately) fall together, Revelex walked away from it,
and it canât now walk back its walk-away. 2
2
Next up: The district court granted Revelex judgment as a matter of law on
Pier 1âs claim for lost profits, concluding that Pier 1âs supporting proof was
impermissibly speculative and thus legally insufficient. Pier 1 contests that
conclusion, but we find no error in the district courtâs determination.
2
While we can conclude without assistance that the SOW is a stand-alone, independent
contractâor at least that Revelex is estopped from arguing otherwise hereâwe cannot conclude
with any confidence that any SOW-based claim survives the Service Agreementâs exculpatory
clause. Maybe so; maybe not. See infra at 22â23.
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To recover lost profits under Florida law, a plaintiff âmust prove that 1) the
defendantâs action caused the damage and 2) there is some standard by which the
amount of damages may be adequately determined.â W.W. Gay Mech. Contractor,
Inc. v. Wharfside Two, Ltd., 545 So. 2d 1348, 1351 (Fla. 1989). The precise
amount of lost profits neednât be definitively proven, but it must be âestablished
with reasonable certainty.â Twyman v. Roell, 166 So. 215, 217 (Fla. 1936). There
must, in short, be âa reasonable yardstick by which to estimate the damages.â
Nebula Glass Intâl, Inc. v. Reichhold, Inc., 454 F.3d 1203, 1217 (11th Cir. 2006);
see also Twyman, 166 So. at 218. In any event, Florida law is clear that an award
of lost profits âmust be supported by evidence and cannot be based on mere
speculation or conjecture.â Sampley Enters., Inc. v. Laurilla, 404 So. 2d 841, 842
(Fla. 5th Dist. Ct. App. 1981). If âthe terms conjecture and surmise too grandly
describe the plaintiffâs lost profits claim, the cases are legion that none can be
recovered.â Stensby v. Effjohn Oy Ab, 806 So. 2d 542, 544 (Fla. 3d Dist. Ct. App.
2001) (collecting cases).
Pier 1âs lost-profits claim rested on the testimony of its financial manager,
Mariana Peres, who was not tendered as an expert but rather appeared as a lay
witness. Peres projected that if Revelexâs software had worked, Pier 1 would
âactually [have] double[d] the number of cruisesâ sold through online channels
alone, which would have meant selling about one additional cruise per month
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either directly or through its sub-agents. Peres further testified that Pier 1 brings in
revenue, on average, of $1,000 per cruise. She also predicted a 10% increase in
Pier 1âs expenses. Peres based her calculation on Pier 1âs historical sales and its
experience in the Brazilian cruise industry. When Revelex objected that Peres, as a
lay witness, was attempting to offer expert testimony, the district court agreed and
cut off her testimony. Pier 1 presented no other evidence pertaining to lost profits,
and the district court later granted judgment as a matter of law against its lost-
profits claim.
We agree with the district courtâs determination that Pier 1âs lost-profits
calculation was too speculative to proceed and that, without it, the evidence
regarding lost profits was legally insufficient. The district court correctly
concluded that Peres seemed to have âdecided to pick a number out of thin airâ to
conclude that Pier 1 could have sold âdouble[]â the number of cruises that sold
through conventional means. Peresâs lone justification for her assertion that Pier 1
would have doubled its sales was that â[she] considered [it] a very reasonable
[estimate] because [Pier 1] would have a new marketâ and âother distribution
channelsâ with the new software. To be sure, she testified that she did some
âmarket researchâ on âe-commerce in Brazil,â but she never explained why it was
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reasonably certain that Pier 1 would sell twice as many cruises online as it had sold
offline.3
Peresâs calculation of Pier 1âs increased expensesâ10%âwas also
impermissibly speculative. She projected that expenses would grow as a result of
both the costs of marketing the softwareâs benefits and inflation in Brazil. With
respect to her particular number, she testified that she âwent ahead and added ten
percent to all of [Pier 1âs] expensesâ because it âwould be reasonable to have an
additional ten percent in order to include all of the different market variationsââ
meaning âinflation and anything else that might come up.â Peres testified that âit
was [her] intent to be conservative with respect to the calculations,â but her choice
to peg the expense increase at 10% also seems to have come out of âthin air.â
Because the district court cut Peresâs testimony short, Pier 1âs only surviving
evidence of lost profits was its historical revenues and expenses. But from Pier 1âs
past offline sales the jury could only speculate about the profits it might have lost
from missed online opportunities. For example, Pier 1 didnât establish how the
jury could have concluded that the hypothetical individuals who would have
bought cruises online were new customers, rather than old customers who had
switched from offline to online purchasing. And because Pier 1 acknowledged that
3
To be clear, Peres testified that Pier 1 was selling 50 cruises per month before the website, and
that the website would âdoubleâ sales to 100 per month, independent of the existing offline sales.
All told, that is actually a prediction that gross sales would triple to 150 per month.
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no comparable businesses existedâit said that it would have been the first
Brazilian travel agency to offer online bookings in Portugueseâit provided no
âyardstickâ by which the jury could calculate lost online sales. Finally, as the
district court explained, unlike the ordinary lost-profits case, â[i]n this case, weâre
not talking about losing business; weâre talking about not gaining business.â Pier
1, that is, wasnât being denied existing sales as a result of Revelexâs failure to
deliver the customized software; customers could continue to book cruises over the
phone or in person. Instead, Pier 1 had hoped to add a new method of distribution
through online bookings, which it claimed Revelex had failed to deliver. Again,
though, Pier 1 didnât present sufficient evidence by which the jury could calculate
the resulting lost profits with reasonable certainty.
The district court correctly granted Revelex judgment as a matter of law on
Pier 1âs lost-profits claim.
3
Finally: Pier 1 contends that it is entitled to attorneysâ fees. The district
court denied Pier 1âs fees motion because it held that the Service Agreementâs
exculpatory clause rendered the entire contract illusory and unenforceableâmuch
more on that belowâand, therefore, that § 4.3 of the Agreement, which speaks to
fees, provided no basis for recovery.
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The way we see it, no matter how the Service Agreement is interpreted, Pier
1 canât get attorneysâ fees. If, in response to our certified question, the Florida
Supreme Court concludes that the exculpatory clause rendered the Service
Agreement unenforceable, then Pier 1 isnât entitled to fees for the reason the
district court identified. See Katz v. Van Der Noord, 546 So. 2d 1047, 1049 (Fla.
1989) (holding that a party cannot recover attorneysâ fees based on a provision of a
contract that is deemed never to have been formed). And what if the Florida
Supreme Court goes the other way and concludes that the Service Agreement is (in
the main, anyway) enforceable? As to attorneysâ fees, same result; the particular
phrasing and scope of the Agreementâs attorneysâ-fees provision precludes Pier 1âs
fee request.
Pier 1 grounds its attorneysâ-fees claim in § 4.3 of the Service Agreement.
That provision commits Pier 1 âto pay all court costs, fees, expenses and
reasonable attorneysâ fees incurred by Revelex in collecting delinquent fees.â On
its face, anyway, § 4.3 doesnât operate in reverseâit doesnât require Revelex to
pay fees to Pier 1 under any circumstances. Happily for Pier 1, the one-sidedness
of § 4.3 isnât fatal, because Florida law permits court to engraft a reciprocity
condition onto contractual attorneysâ-fee provisions. In particular, Florida Statute
§ 57.105(7) provides thatâ
[i]f a contract contains a provision allowing attorneyâs fees to a party
when he or she is required to take any action to enforce the contract, the
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court may also allow reasonable attorneyâs fees to the other party when
that party prevails in any action, whether as plaintiff or defendant, with
respect to the contract.
Fla. Stat. § 57.105(7). The Florida courts have held that § 57.105(7) aims âto even
the playing field,â which inures to Pier 1âs benefit here. Fla. Hurricane Prot. &
Awning, Inc. v. Pastina, 43 So. 3d 893, 895 (Fla. 4th Dist. Ct. App. 2010).
Sadly for Pier 1, Florida courts have also emphasizedâin the same breathâ
that § 57.105(7) doesnât authorize them, in the name of enforcing reciprocity, to
âexpand ⌠the terms of the agreement.â Id. At most, then, § 4.3 can be read to
provide a reciprocal right to collect attorneysâ fees âincurred ⌠in collecting
delinquent fees.â Reading § 4.3 to permit recovery of fees for breach-of-contract
and negligent-misrepresentation, as Pier 1 asks, would be âtantamount to re-
writing the contract between the partiesââwhich, Florida law makes clear, âwe
[may] not do.â Pastina, 43 So. 3d at 895.
Accordingly, we hold that no matter how the Service Agreement is
interpretedâthat is, whether its exculpatory clause renders the entire Agreement
illusory or notâPier 1 is not entitled to recover attorneysâ fees.
B
Which brings us to the biggie: How to handle the Service Agreementâs
exculpatory clause? That question tees up two subsidiary issues, which weâll
address in turn: First, when and under what circumstances are exculpatory clauses
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enforceable as a general matter? And second, what is the effect of the particularâ
and particularly broadâexculpatory clause at issue in this case?
1
Although ânot looked upon with favorâ by Florida courts, Ivey Plants, Inc. v.
FMC Corp., 282 So. 2d 205, 208 (Fla. 4th Dist. Ct. App. 1973), an exculpatory
clause is enforceable so long as (1) the contracting parties have equal bargaining
power and (2) the clauseâs provisions are clear and unambiguous, see Cooper v.
Meridian Yachts, Ltd., 575 F.3d 1151, 1168 n.9 (11th Cir. 2009) (citing Key
Biscayne Divers, Inc. v. Marine Stadium Enters., Inc., 490 So. 2d 137, 138 (Fla. 3d
Dist. Ct. App. 1986)). With respect to the latter requirement, âthe intention to be
relieved from liability [must be] made clear and unequivocal and the wording must
be so clear and understandable that an ordinary and knowledgeable person will
know what he is contracting away.â Cain v. Banka, 932 So. 2d 575, 578 (Fla. 5th
Dist. Ct. App. 2006). In the same vein, exculpatory clauses are âstrictly construed
against the party seeking to be relieved of liability.â Id. at 580.
So far as we can tellâand weâve been given no reason to think otherwiseâ
Pier 1 and Revelex had equal bargaining power. And the exculpatory clause that
they executed as part of the Service Agreement provision is crystal clear. Section
12.1 expressly insulates Revelex from âany ⌠damages regardless of kind or type
⌠whether in contract, tort (including negligence), or otherwise.â Moreover, as
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we have emphasized, the record reflects that the clauseâs language was no
accident; rather, it unambiguously communicated Revelexâs intent to disclaim all
liability. Recall that Revelexâs president explained that his company âc[ould not]
afford to take on any liabilityâ and thus was ânot going to be financially liable.â
We accept, therefore, that the Service Agreementâs exculpatory clause is not
invalid as a matter of public policy.
2
The much tougher question, to which we now turnâand which we will
certify to the Florida Supreme Courtâis whether the exculpatory clause is
enforceable here. We see three possibilities, all of which find some support in
Florida law and (or really but) have dramatically different consequences for this
case. First, there is Revelexâs position: The clause should simply be enforced
according to its terms to bar all of Pier 1âs claims. Second, there is Pier 1âs (and
the district courtâs) position: Read for all itâs worth, the exculpatory clause
immunizes Revelex from essentially all liability and thereby renders the entire
Service Agreement illusory and void ab initio. Finally, there is an in-between
position: To avoid the illusoriness problem, the clause should be construed to bar
only negligence claims, not breach-of-contract claims. We will explore each
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possibility briefly before formally certifying the question to the Florida Supreme
Court.4
a
The way Revelex sees it, this is an easy case. The Service Agreementâs
exculpatory clause should simply be enforced according to its plain termsâwhich,
again, both (1) insulate Revelex from âany ⌠damages regardless of kind or type
⌠whether in contract, tort (including negligence), or otherwise,â and (2) clarify
that Pier 1 has âwaive[d] any and all claims ⌠that it may have against Revelex âŚ
arising out of this agreement and the services.â Enforcement of the exculpatory
clause could take either of two slightly different forms: broad and broader. On the
first (broad) reading, the clause would knock out both Pier 1âs negligent-
misrepresentation claim and any breach-of-contract claim grounded in the Service
Agreementâbut not necessarily a contract claim grounded in a separate
4
We said that there were three possibilities. There is perhaps a fourth. In the district court, Pier
1 contended that the Settlement Agreementâs exculpatory clause should be severed, and the
remainder of the contract enforced, pursuant to § 16.7, which states in relevant part that â[i]f any
provision of this Agreement is held to be invalid or unenforceable for any reason ⌠the
remaining provisions ⌠shall remain in full force and effect and shall be binding on the parties
hereto.â Pier 1 mentions but does not press its severance argument on appeal, and Revelex
vigorously contends that severance would be improper because the Settlement Agreement states
that the exculpatory clause is âan essential basis of the bargain between the parties âŚ.â
Settlement Agreement § 12.3. We are inclined to agree with Revelex that severance would be
improper here, see, e.g., Local No. 234 v. Henley & Beckwith, Inc., 66 So. 2d 818, 821â22 (Fla.
1953) (holding that severance is appropriate only âwhere the illegal portion of the contract does
not go to its essenceâ and that severability âdepends upon the intention of the partiesâ as
discerned, in part, âby a fair construction of the terms and provisions of the contract itselfâ), but
we leave the final determination of the issue to the Florida Supreme Court.
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agreement, such as the SOW. 5 On this reading, the exculpatory clauseâs second
sentenceânoting Pier 1âs waiver of claims âarising out of this agreement and the
servicesââcabins the clauseâs reach vis-Ă -vis contract claims to those emanating
from the Settlement Agreement, in which the clause resides. There is also, though,
a second, more sweeping interpretation. The clauseâs first sentenceâimmunizing
Revelex from âany ⌠damages regardless of kind or type ⌠whether in contract,
tort (including negligence), or otherwiseââis framed broadly enough that it might
be understood to reach beyond the Service Agreementâs four corners to cover and
negate Pier 1âs SOW-based contract claim, as well.
In either event, in support of its position that the court should enforce the
clause, Revelex points to a number of cases in which Florida courts have enforced
some pretty broad exculpatory clauses without suggesting that they rendered
illusory or otherwise invalidated (or even undermined) the contracts in which they
appeared. See Br. of Appellant at 16â17 (citing, e.g., L. Luria & Son, Inc. v.
Honeywell, Inc., 460 So. 2d 521, 522 (Fla. 4th Dist. Ct. App. 1984), Ace Formal
Wear v. Baker Protective Serv., 416 So. 2d 8, 9 (Fla. 3d Dist. Ct. App. 1982), and
Windstar Club, Inc. v. WS Realty, Inc., 886 So. 2d 986, 986â87 (Fla. 2d Dist. Ct.
App. 2004)). In Ace Formal Wear, for instance, a business brought breach-of-
5
Revelex has conceded that the exculpatory clause doesnât cover intentional torts, but Pier 1
long ago dropped its fraudulent-misrepresentation claim, so that issue doesnât arise.
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contract and negligence claims against the company that had installed its alarm
system. After the system had been installed, burglars entered the customerâs store
through a window that hadnât been wired âeven though the wiring of that window
was required by the [installation] contract.â 416 So. 2d at 9. In rejecting the
customerâs claims against the installer, the court pointed to and applied the
following exculpatory clause, which was contained in the installation agreement:
Subscriber agrees that [the installer] shall not be liable for any of
Subscriberâs losses or damages, irrespective of origin, to person or to
property, whether directly or indirectly caused by performance or
nonperformance of obligations imposed by this contract or by
negligent acts or omissions of [the installer], its agents or employees.
The Subscriber does hereby waive and release any rights of recovery
against [the installer] that it may have hereunder.
Id. In a short opinion, the court enforced the clause, observing that â[t]he parties
were at liberty to contract as they pleased.â Id.
We make two brief observations, without in any way meaning to prejudge
matters. First, the decisions that Revelex cites donât formally control here, if only
because, so far as we can tell, the illusoriness issue that Pier 1 raisesâand to which
weâll turn nextâwasnât presented, addressed, or decided in any of them. Second,
there is a certain oddity (and perhaps inequity) in Revelexâs position, in that it
permits a contracting party simultaneously (1) to promise to perform some
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particular duty and (2) to immunize itself from any failure to perform that very
duty. 6 Which leads us to Pier 1âs (and the district courtâs) position.
b
Pier 1 argues, and the district court held, that the Service Agreementâs
exculpatory clause was so broadâagain, insulating Revelex from liability for âany
⌠damages regardless of kind or type ⌠whether in contract, tort (including
negligence), or otherwiseââthat it had the effect of rendering the entire contract
illusory, and thus void ab initio.
It seems to us that there is likewise support in Florida law for this view.
Under the law of Florida, there are several âbasic requirementsâ of a valid contract:
âoffer, acceptance, consideration[,] and sufficient specification of essential terms.â
St. Joe Corp. v. McIver, 875 So. 2d 375, 381 (Fla. 2004). Consideration, Florida
courts have held, is âthe primary element moving the execution of a contract,â
Frissell v. Nichols, 114 So. 431, 434 (Fla. 1927), and âabsolutely necessary to the
forming of a good contract,â Jones v. McCallum, 21 Fla. 392, 392 (Fla. 1885). Put
simply, absent consideration there is no contractânever was. Rather, â[t]he law
aptly terms an agreement to do an act or to pay money or other thing where there is
no consideration for it a nudum pactumâa naked agreementâa promise without
6
The oddity is magnified if (as explained above) the exculpatory clause is read to reach beyond
the Service Agreement and negate contract-based claims arising under other agreements,
including the SOW. See supra at 23.
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legal support, which the law will not enforce, no matter whether verbal or written,
or however earnestly and solemnly made.â Jones, 21 Fla. at 395.
It seems equally well-settled that â[w]here an illusory promise is made, that
is, a promise merely in form, but in actuality not promising anything, it cannot
serve as consideration.â 3 Williston on Contracts § 7:7 (4th ed. 2010). So, when is
a contract illusory under Florida law, and thus incapable of supplying the necessary
consideration? When âone of the promises appears on its face to be so
insubstantial as to impose no obligation at all on the promisorâwho says, in effect,
âI will if I want to.ââ Princeton Homes, Inc. v. Virone, 612 F.3d 1324, 1331 (11th
Cir. 2010) (quoting Johnson Enters. of Jacksonville, Inc. v. FPL Grp., Inc., 162
F.3d 1290, 1311 (11th Cir. 1998)). Put slightly differently, â[w]here one party
retains to itself the option of fulfilling or declining to fulfill its obligations under
the contract, there is no valid contract and neither side may be bound.â Pan-Am
Tobacco Corp. v. Depât of Corr., 471 So. 2d 4, 6 (Fla. 1984). In particularâand
closer to home hereâFlorida courts have held that âto prevent the contract from
being illusory,â the non-breaching party must have both â[t]he ability to sue for
damagesâ and âthe ability to collect on the resulting judgment.â Fla. Depât of
Envtl. Prot. v. ContractPoint Fla. Parks, LLC, 986 So. 2d 1260, 1270 (Fla. 2008).
The reasoning seems to be that absent a viable threat of liability, a contracting
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party could âbreach with impunity.â Port Largo Club, Inc. v. Warren, 476 So. 2d
1330, 1333 (Fla. 3d Dist. Ct. App. 1985).
The district courtâs conclusionâfollowing Pier 1âs leadâwas that by
insulating Revelex from âany ⌠damages regardless of kind or type ⌠whether in
contract, tort (including negligence), or otherwise,â the exculpatory clause here
denied Pier 1 â[t]he ability to sue for damagesâ and âcollect on [any] resulting
judgment,â ContractPoint, 986 So. 2d at 1270, and thereby rendered the Service
Agreement illusory. That conclusion left Pier 1âs negligent-misrepresentation
claim intactâbecause the exculpatory clause couldnât be enforced to bar itâbut
wiped out its breach-of-contract claimâthere being no valid contract on which to
sue.
That result, we think, suggests that there is a certain oddity inherent in this
position, as well. In district courtâs (and perhaps more strangely, Pier 1âs) view,
the beneficiary of a sweeping exculpatory clause like the one at issue here would
seemâat least with respect to breach-of-contract claimsâto be in a âheads I win,
tails you loseâ situation. Either (1) the court enforces the clause, thereby
immunizing the beneficiary from liability on the contract, or (2) the court
invalidates the entire contract, thereby ⌠you guessed it, immunizing the
beneficiary from liability on the contract. Weird. (Here, of course, the inequity of
that result is masked by the fact that Pier 1 brought a negligent-misrepresentation
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claim that survived that Service Agreementâs invalidation, but that wonât always or
necessarily be the case.)
c
There is a third option, suggested by the decisions in Ivey Plants Inc. v. FMC
Corp., 282 So. 2d 205 (Fla. 4th Dist. Ct. App. 1973), and Sniffen v. Century
National Bank of Broward, 375 So. 2d 892 (Fla. 4th Dist. Ct. App. 1979). In each
case, the court addressed the effect of an exculpatory clause in a lease agreement
on a claim-by-claim basis, concluding that it barred a partyâs negligence-based
claim but not his breach-of-contract claim. In Ivey Plants, the court observed that
â[a] determination of the applicability of [an exculpatory clause] requires an
analysis of its language in relation to the [s]ubject matter of the lease as well as the
[d]ifferent causes of actionâ in the case, and held that â[t]he function of the
exculpatory clause [at issue there was] to deprive one of the contracting parties of
his right to recover damages suffered due to the negligent act of the otherâ but that
the clause âd[id] not operate to exculpate or exonerate [the] defendant from
performing under the terms of the lease agreement.â 282 So. 2d at 207â08. So
too, in Sniffen, the court left open the possibility that a broad exculpatory clause
could âpreclude recovery for [the defendantâs] negligence,â but held that the clause
âc[ould not] be employed ⌠to negate the specific contractual undertaking âŚ.â
375 So. 2d at 893 & n.2. Exonerating the defendant from contractual liability, the
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court emphasized, âwould render the agreement between the parties entirely
nugatoryâ in that the plaintiff would âhave received nothing whatever in return for
his rental fee.â Id. at 893â94.
What would be the effect of following Ivey Plants and Sniffen here?
Seemingly, just the opposite of (as just discussed) invalidating the entire Service
Agreement as illusory: Pier 1 would lose its negligent-misrepresentation claim to
the exculpatory clause, but would retain its breach-of-contract claim. Ivey Plants
and Sniffen seem to make good equitable senseâbut they are not quite on point,
and the distinction between those cases and this one arguably calls for a different
result. Recall that Ivey Plants (whose analysis Sniffen followed) repeatedly
emphasized the âlanguageâ of the particular âprovisionsâ of the exculpatory clause
there at issue, concluding that it was ânot applicableâ to the plaintiffâs breach-of-
contract claim. 282 So. 2d at 207â10. And that was true; the clause at issue there
was broadly written, but it did not explicitly address breach-of-contract claims.
See id. at 207. (The same was true of the clause at issue in Sniffen. See 375 So. 2d
at 893.) Here, the exculpatory clauseâs âlanguageâ is not only broad but also
specific; it forecloses all liability, for âany ⌠damagesâ of any âkind or typeââ
expressly including those sounding in âcontract.â Accordingly, whereas the Ivey
Plants and Sniffen courts had the luxury of being able to interpret their clausesâ
terms in a manner that preserved breach-of-contract liability and thus avoided
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illusoriness, a court interpreting the Service Agreementâs exculpatory clauseâand
the contracting partiesâ intent underlying itâarguably doesnât have the same
freedom.
* * *
Having framed and briefly explored the issue as we see it, we certify the
following (admittedly compound) question to the Florida Supreme Court:
Is a contractual âexculpatory clauseâ that purports to insulate one of
the signatories from âany ⌠damages regardless of kind or type âŚ
whether in contract, tort (including negligence), or otherwiseâ
enforceable? Or, alternatively, does the clause confer such sweeping
immunity that it renders the entire contract in which it appears
illusory? Or, finally, might the clause plausibly be construed so as to
bar some but not all claims and thus save the contract from
invalidation? 7
We are satisfied that the question meets the requirements of Fla. R. App. P.
9.150(a). See also Fla. Const. art. V, § 3(6); Fla. Stat. § 25.031. First, it is a
âquestion[] of law,â Rule 9.150(a), whose answer depends on the discernment and
application of Florida contract principles. Second, the question is âdeterminative
of the cause.â Id. For reasons already explained, depending on how the question
is resolved, Pier 1 will be left either (1) with a breach-of-contract claim but no
negligent-misrepresentation claim, or (2) with a negligent-misrepresentation claim
7
As is always the case when we certify questions, our phrasing is not intended to restrict, in any
way, the Florida Supreme Courtâs consideration or resolution of the issue. See, e.g., Altman
Contractors, Inc. v. Crum & Forster Specialty Ins. Co., 832 F.3d 1318, 1326 (11th Cir. 2016).
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but no breach-of-contract claim, or (3) with neither claim. Finally, âthere is no
controlling precedent of the Supreme Court of Florida.â Id. As weâve said,
Florida law arguably supports any of three different answers to the question, but
none of the decisions that have been cited to us (or that we have found ourselves)
is quite on point.
We are also satisfied that the question meets our own standard for certifying
questions of state law. There is, we think, clearly âdoubt in the interpretation of
[Florida] lawâ here, such that we mayâand we believe shouldââcertify [a]
question to the state supreme court [so that we] avoid making unnecessary Erie
guesses and ⌠offer the state court the opportunity to interpret or change existing
law.â Union Planters Bank, N.A. v. New York, 436 F.3d 1305, 1306 (11th Cir.
2006) (citation omitted).
Finally, we are confident that a proper respect for the principles of
federalism counsels certification here. By virtue of the diversity jurisdiction
conferred on federal courts under 28 U.S.C. § 1332, we are empowered to answer
questions of Florida law. But doing so is hardly our specialty, whereas it is the
Florida Supreme Courtâs. Any resolution that we could provide regarding the
question(s) that we have identified wouldnât bind the Florida courts, who would be
free (as they should be) to come to their own conclusions. The Florida Supreme
Court, by contrast, is the ultimate arbiter of Florida law; both we and the lower
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state courts are bound by its determinations of state law. See, e.g., Mullaney v.
Wilbur, 421 U.S. 684, 691 (1975). Particularly where, as here, we are faced with a
common-law question that is, at once, so knotty and weighty, we see no sound
reason not to facilitate the Florida Supreme Courtâs consideration and resolution of
it. Cf. Trail Builders Supply Co. v. Reagan, 409 F.2d 1059, 1060â61 (5th Cir.
1969) (âAs an Erie-bound Court, we are obliged to follow the Florida appellate
decisions in diversity matters, and if there are no decisions on point, we may make
an educated guess as to what the Florida courts would decideâŚ. However, there is
available to us the right to submit by certification the ⌠issues raised by this
case.â).8
III
For the foregoing reasons, we hold as follows:
1. We affirm the district courtâs decision that the Scope of Work exists
independently of the Service Agreement on the ground that Revelex has waived
any argument to the contrary (or, alternatively, invited any alleged error or is
judicially estopped from now contesting the district courtâs determination).
8
See Bonner v. City of Prichard, 661 F.2d 1206, 1209 (11th Cir. 1981) (holding that decisions of
the former Fifth Circuit handed down prior to the close of business on September 30, 1981, are
binding in the Eleventh Circuit).
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2. We likewise affirm the district courtâs decision that Pier 1âs lost-
profits claim fails as a matter of law and that Revelex is entitled to judgment as a
matter of law on that claim.
3. We hold that Pier 1 is not entitled to recover attorneysâ fees.
4. We certify to the Florida Supreme Court the following question, in
whatever form that court chooses to address it:
Is a contractual âexculpatory clauseâ that purports to insulate one of
the signatories from âany ⌠damages regardless of kind or type âŚ
whether in contract, tort (including negligence), or otherwiseâ
enforceable? Or, alternatively, does the clause confer such sweeping
immunity that it renders the entire contract in which it appears
illusory? Or, finally, might the clause plausibly be construed so as to
bar some but not all claims and thus save the contract from
invalidation?
AFFIRMED IN PART, and QUESTION CERTIFIED.
33