A disappointed plaintiff, All-Tech Tele-com, appeals from the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the defendant, Amway, on All-Tech’s claims of intentional and negligent misrepresentation and promissory estoppel. All-Tech was allowed to get to the jury on claims of breach of warranty, and the jury found a breach but awarded no damages. There is no challenge to the jury’s verdict, only to the grant of summary judgment on the other claims. The basis of federal jurisdiction is diversity of citizenship, and the parties agree that the substantive issues are governed by Wisconsin law.
In 1987, Amway had offered distributors a new product (really a product plus a service), the “TeleCharge” phone. The phone was intended for the use of customers of hotels and restaurants. The customer would use a credit card or telephone calling card to pay for a long-distance call. The hotel or restaurant, along with the distributor, Amway, and the long-distance phone companies involved in the calls, would divide the line charges. Beginning in 1988, All-Tech, which was created for the very purpose of being an Amway distributor of TeleCharge phones and the associated telephone service, bought a large number of the phones. For a variety of reasons beyond All-Tech’s control, including equipment problems, regulatory impediments to the provision of the Tele-Charge program, and finally the obsolescence of the phones, which caused Amway to withdraw the product from the market in 1992, TeleCharge was a flop. All-Tech claims to have been lured into and kept in this losing venture by a series of misrepresentations, such as that Amway had done extensive research before offering the service, that the service would be the “best” in the nation, that any business telephone line could be used with the Tele-Charge phone, that the service had been approved in all 50 states and did not require the approval of any telephone company, that each phone could be expected to *865 generate an annual revenue for the distributor of $750, that the carrier that Amway had retained to handle the calls and billings for the TeleCharge phones (International Tele-Charge, Inc. (ITI)) was the largest company of its kind in the nation, and that the purchaser of a TeleCharge phone would have to deal with ITI — the phone could not be reprogrammed to work with any other carrier.
The district court threw out All-Tech’s claims of misrepresentation on the basis of the “economic loss” doctrine of the common law. Originally this doctrine was merely a limitation on who could bring a tort suit for the consequences of a personal injury or damage to property: only the injured person himself, or the owner of the damaged property himself, and not also persons having commercial links to the owner, such as employees or suppliers of a merchant whose store was burned down as a result of the negligence of a third party, the tort defendant.
Daanen & Janssen, Inc. v. Cedarapids, Inc.,
One explanation for it is that a tort may have indirect consequences that are beneficial — in the example just given, to competitors of the burned-down store — as well as harmful, and since the tortfeasor is not entitled to sue for the benefits, neither should he have to pay for the losses.
CSY Liquidating Corp. v. Harris Trust & Savings Bank,
This point has implications for commercial fraud as well as for business losses that are secondary to physical harms to person or property. Where there are well-developed contractual remedies, such as the remedies that the Uniform Commercial Code (in force in all U.S. states) provides for breach of warranty of the quality, fitness, or specifications of goods, there is no need to provide tort remedies for misrepresentation. The tort remedies would duplicate the contract remedies, adding unnecessary complexity to the law. Worse, the provision of these duplicative tort remedies would undermine contract law. That law has been shaped by a tension between a policy of making the jury the normal body for resolving factual disputes and the desire of parties to contracts to be able to rely on the written word and not be exposed to the unpredictable reactions of lay factfinders to witnesses who testify that the contract means something different from what it says. Many doctrines of contract law, such as the parol evidence and “four cor
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ners” rules, are designed to limit the scope of jury trial of contract disputes (another example is the statute of frauds). Tort law does not have these screens against the vagaries of the jury. In recognition of this omission, the “economic loss” doctrine in the form invoked by the district judge in this case on the authority of a growing body of case law illustrated by
Cooper Power Systems, Inc. v. Union Carbide Chemicals & Plastics Co.,
The function of the economic-loss doctrine in confining contract parties to their contractual remedies is particularly well illustrated by cases involving product warranties, such as our
Cooper Power Systems
case. See also
Neibarger v. Universal Cooperatives, Inc.,
Some of our cases describe the economic-loss doctrine in words that might seem to imply the abolition of the tort of misrepresentation (including deliberate fraud) in all cases in which the plaintiff and the defendant are business firms having a preexisting contractual relationship that had given rise to the fraud or other misrepresentation. E.g.,
Midwest Knitting Mills, Inc. v. United States,
If commercial fraud is to go completely by the boards, as a literal reading of some of the economic-loss cases might suggest, then prospective parties to contracts will be able to obtain legal protection against fraud only by insisting that the other party to the contract reduce all representations to writing, and so there will be additional contractual negotiations, contracts will be longer, and, in short, transaction costs will be higher. And the additional costs will be incurred in the making of
every
commercial contract, not just the tiny fraction that end up in litigation. Granted, there are costs of uncertainty from the possibility of falsely charging fraud when a contractual relationship sours, as it did in this case. But the fraud tort comes with safeguards against false claims, such as the requirement of pleading fraud with particularity and (in many though not all jurisdictions) a heightened burden of proof — clear and convincing evidence versus a bare preponderance of the evidence, the standard civil burden.
Ackerman v. Northwestern Mutual Life Ins. Co.,
But the representations challenged in this case do not press against the boundaries of the economic-loss doctrine. For they are in the nature of warranties (remember that the plaintiff made warranty claims, which the judge sent to the jury), and we cannot think of a reason why the fact that the “product” warranted was a hybrid of a product and a service should affect the application of the doctrine. A genuine stumbling block to affirming on its basis, however, is the fact that its application to cases of
intentional
misrepresentation is uncertain.
Daanen & Janssen, Inc. v. Cedarapids, Inc., supra,
Some of the representations were made not by Amway but by one of its distributors, at a trade meeting attended by All-Tech’s principals. Amway distributors are independent contractors,
Amway Corp., Inc. v. Director of Revenue,
Many of Amway’s alleged misrepresentations were either pure puffing (such as TeleCharge is “the best”) — which is to say, empty superlatives on which no reasonable person would rely,
State v. American TV & Appliance of Madison, Inc.,
The TeleCharge service was new, and like many new services it ran into unexpected, and ultimately fatal, problems. As these problems surfaced, Amway would notify its distributors, including All-Tech. Despite a barrage of bad news, All-Tech continued buying TeleCharge phones. It could not have been relying on the alleged misrepresentations. All of them had either been corrected before All-Tech bought the phones or would not have misled a commercial purchaser. Or were not material, such as ITI’s size — whether or not it was the largest company of its kind, the kind the parties call “alternative operator service,” it was not a fly-by-night outfit incapable of providing the service for which Amway had contracted with it. Or were hypothetical: “If you charge the one dollar maximum access fee, with an average of only three billable long-distance calls a day, five days per week, 50 weeks per year, you may generate up to $750 a year from just one phone” — impeccable arithmetic, given the premises, which Amway did not warrant. Or were predictions that either were too vague to ground reasonable reliance or were not falsified. Or were not made at all, such as the representation that the -phone could not be reprogrammed to work with another operator service besides ITI. There were, in short, no actionable misrepresentations.
All-Tech’s alternative claim is promissory estoppel. The doctrine of promissory estoppel provides an alternative basis to consideration for treating a promise as a contractual undertaking. When applicable, which to say when the promise is definite enough to induce a reasonable person to rely,
Hoffman v. Red Owl Stores, Inc.,
Promises are usually forward-looking; one promises to do something, necessarily in the future. The promise that All-Tech stresses as the basis for its claim of promissory estoppel- — that Amway had thoroughly researched the TeleCharge program before offering it to distributors — is not of that character. It warrants
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a past or existing condition rather than committing to some future action and is thus more precisely described as a warranty than as a promise. UCC § 2-313(l)(a);
Restatement (Second) of Contracts
§ 2 comment d (1981);
Ewers v. Eisenzopf,
Since a warranty can induce reasonable reliance, its breach can be the basis for a claim of promissory estoppel.
Vidimos, Inc. v. Laser Lab Ltd.,
The objections to All-Tech’s claim of promissory estoppel are related to our earlier point that the economic-loss doctrine serves to protect contract doctrines and to prevent the piling on of duplicative remedies. Promissory estoppel is meant for cases in which a promise, not being supported by consideration, would be unenforceable under conventional principles of contract law. When there is an express contract governing the relationship out of which the promise emerged, and no issue of consideration, there is no gap in the remedial system for promissory estoppel to fill.
Spensley Feeds, Inc. v. Livingston Feed & Lumber, Inc.,
AFFIRMED.
