This appeal centers around an award of exemplary damages under Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A made in favor of the plaintiff Amcel Corporation and against Lou Petrone, a defendant in the district court. In the relevant time frame, Petrone was the president and majority shareholder of co-defendant International Executive Sales (“IES”). A truncated history of the controversy, based on the findings of the trial judge, will suffice to frame the issues on this appeal.
Amcel is a Massachusetts company that makes plastic cutlery and trash can liners for commercial use. Between April 1987 and August 1992, IES served as an exclusive commission sales representative for Amcel in southern Ohio and West Virginia. Pertinently, IES agreed that it would not represent lines that conflicted or competed with Am-cel’s product lines. Nevertheless, as the district court later found, IES breached this understanding in several respects.
Beginning in March 1992, IES — at Pe-trone’s direction — began to sell to some of Ameel’s customers plastic trash can liners
Ultimately, IES resigned as Amcel’s representative on August 14, 1992, effective at the end of that month. Thereafter, Amcel learned that IES had been selling Carlisle liners to Amcel customers. In September 1992, Amcel sued IES and Petrone in Massachusetts state court. 1 The complaint included claims for breach of contract and for unfair and deceptive acts or practices in violation of Massachusetts’ chapter 93A. After some preliminary maneuvers irrelevant here, the case was removed by the defendants to federal district court on May 21,1993.
On June 15, 1993, Petrone and IES moved to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction or to transfer to another district. The motion also urged that the 93A claim be dismissed because the acts or practices in question were “alleged” to have occurred in Kentucky and Ohio rather than “primarily and substantially” in Massachusetts, as section 93A expressly requires. Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A, § 11. On June 24, 1994, the magistrate judge (Judge Bowler) wrote a thorough decision recommending denial of these requests, which the district court (Judge Lindsay) later sustained.
In refusing the recommended dismissal of the 93A claim, the magistrate judge pointed out that the case law has been generous in allowing the “primarily and substantially” requirement to be met by considering not only the site of the wrongful acts but also where the plaintiff “received and acted upon” the wrongful acts and the site of the loss or damages.
Clinton Hosp. Ass’n v. Corson Group, Inc.,
The case was tried to the bench over 12 days between December 9, 1996, and January 28, 1997. On September 26, 1997, Judge Lindsay issued a detailed memorandum decision. On the contract claim, he found that between March and August 1992, IES had diverted from Amcel to Carlisle trash can liner sales that would have produced profits for Amcel in the amount of $221,587. This amount, plus interest, was awarded to Amcel against IES. On appeal, the defendants do not challenge this award.
On the 93A claim, the judge found that Petrone’s conduct, primarily the incidents already summarized, represented a pattern of deceptive and unscrupulous conduct and merited trebling of the contract award. Having imposed liability for actual damages on IES, he entered judgment for twice this amount ($443,174) against Petrone, adding attorneys’ fees and costs under the 93A claim. See Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A, § 11. The judgment relating to the 93A claim is the subject of this appeal.
The only claim of error in this court requiring much discussion is defendants’ assertion that the conduct associated with the breach of contract and diversion of sales to Carlisle did not occur “primarily and substantially” in Massachusetts. In a footnote to its decision, the district court said that “Petrone has failed to raise the issue.” The court then said briefly that while “Petrone
[o]utweighing this factor, however, are the facts that (1) Amcel, a Massachusetts company, took action in reliance on the statements in Massachusetts, and (2) the injury to Amcel was sustained in Massachusetts. The court, therefore, concludes that the defendants have failed to carry their burden of proving that the actions took place primarily and substantially outside of Massachusetts.
Although we think that it is quite likely that Amcel would prevail on this issue if we addressed it on the merits, we decline to do so because it has not been adequately preserved for appeal. Under Massachusetts law, the burden is upon the defendant to disprove the “primarily and substantially” condition, making it effectively an affirmative defense. Mass. Gen. Laws eh. 93A, § 11;
see also Play Time, Inc. v. LDDS Metromedia Comms., Inc.,
However, we are not concerned with niceties of pleading. The controlling objection is that following the answer, the defendants never developed the defense: it was not mentioned in their pretrial brief or their post-trial brief in the district court, and if it was mentioned at any point during the trial, Pe-trone and IES have neglected to tell us where. In this court, Amcel said that the defense had been waived, and defendants filed no reply brief at all.
The general rule is that absent extraordinary circumstances, legal theories not raised in district court cannot be raised for the first time on appeal as a matter of right.
2
This limitation has been applied both to issues that are wholly “alien to the record,”
United States v. Kobrosky,
The rule has various reasons, applying with different force in different circumstances. Perhaps most important, often the other side would try its case differently if it knew of the issue; and the trial judge would so instruct the jury or make specific findings on it at a bench trial.
See National Ass’n of Social Workers v. Harwood,
Sometimes on appeal, a legal argument not raised below
(e.g.,
an objection to evidence or an instruction) is fairly viewed under the plain error doctrine.
3
But the defendant’s failure to raise and prove a defense for which the defendant carries the burden of proof involves no judicial error at all; many defenses are potentially available, the court normally considers only those pressed by the defense, and a defense ignored by the defendant is simply forfeit.
See Knapp Shoes, Inc. v. Sylvania Shoe Mfg. Corp.,
Now, it is quite true that an issue resolved on the papers prior to trial may be preserved for appeal—the word “may” should be stressed,
cf. Fusco v. General
But this reservation does Petrone no good in this case. On the papers, the magistrate judge did not err in recommending denial of the motion to dismiss the 93A claim. At the complaint stage, inferences are taken, and doubts are resolved, in favor of the non-moving party,
see Gooley v. Mobil Oil Corp.,
However, this latter argument seeks to raise an issue not litigated at trial. Defendants did not refer to the requirement in their pre-trial brief, or frame it in their papers as a contested issue, or argue it to the judge in post-trial brief, or ask for findings concerning it. Of course, some facts in the record bear on the issue, but gaps also exist. Amcel says, for example, that witnesses would have been asked about just where certain misrepresentations were made, if this had been thought relevant.
Defendants’ best argument is that the district judge, while explicitly finding that Pe-trone had “failed to raise the issue,” went on to decide it. We think the fairest way to take the footnote is as an alternative holding, treating the issue as forfeited but also as without much merit. Judge Lindsay’s treatment of the merits in the footnote would hardly have beer so terse — the gist is a single sentence (quoted above) — unless he believed that defendants had abandoned the issue.
“Belt and suspenders” is a common and generally desirable approach in a district court decision. If the reference to abandonment would otherwise have sufficed, it would be perverse — and send the wrong message— to change the outcome merely because the district judge sought to provide further reassurance by a brief reference to merits. Further, since we join the district court in thinking that the issue was abandoned, fairness to Amcel would likely require a remand (to allow it to counter the showing) if we reached the merits and disagreed with the analysis.
As we noted at the start, in rare cases, an appeals court may choose to address a legal theory not fairly developed in the district court. Although we have spoken of “gross miscarriage of justice,”
Johnston,
But even under Harwood’s more flexible approach, this is not even an arguable case for considering a forfeited issue. The issue is not constitutional or one of continuing public importance; rather, it turns on particular facts that might have been better developed and analyzed if the issue had been raised below. See id. There is a risk of prejudice to the other party here, Amcel. See id. And there is no excuse for the defendants in not pressing the issue below except — and this hardly helps — that it is one on which the defendants would probably have lost. See id.
The defendants’ remaining arguments, unrelated to the “primarily and substantially” test, need not detain us long. Petrone disputes that certain of the collateral conduct he engaged in was an unfair or deceptive act
(e.g.,
the negotiations with Carlisle to become
The district court’s core findings as to deceptive acts and practices related to the diversion of Ameel customers to Carlisle during the period when IES was committed exclusively to represent Amcel on the products it made. Admitting that the standard of review fatally constrains them,
see Brennan v. Carvel Corp.,
Petrone’s remaining objection has a certain brazen charm. He says, uncontroversially, that the damages properly awarded, and multiplied if the court chooses, under 93A are those caused by the unfair or deceptive conduct. See Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A, § 11. He then argues (1) that if Petrone had not concealed his betrayal of Amcel, Amcel would have terminated IES at once, and (2) that the deception therefore benefitted Amcel because IES continued to make sales for Amcel (i.e for customers not diverted to Carlisle) until August 1992. The implication is that the court should have reduced the damages done to Amcel by benefits conferred.
Any Amcel sales that Petrone did not divert prior to August 1992 surely did benefit Amcel. But IES was paid a commission for those sales by Amcel. It is pure speculation to suppose that those customers would have abandoned Amcel for some other supplier if IES had been discharged at an earlier point; Amcel would presumably have commissioned someone else to continue sales in the same territory. Thus, we need not consider other possible objections to this off-set theory.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The complaint named as a third defendant another company of which Petrone was president and a large shareholder; the complaint was based on other dubious transactions by Petrone relating to Amcel's interests. But claims as to this third defendant were settled, and no damages were awarded in this case for those transactions.
.
See Violette v. Smith & Nephew Dyonics, Inc.
. The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure contain no
general
plain error rule,
compare
Fed. R.Crim.P. 52(b), although one might (with difficulty) be inferred from Fed.R.Civ.P. 61. However, the plain error rule is well-established in case law,
see Chute v. Sears Roebuck and Co.,
