Pursuant to S.J.C. Rule 1:03, as appearing in
The plaintiffs are electric utility companies 1 that allege that they incurred substantial losses as a result of the failure of certain components of an electric generator manufactured by the defendant, Westinghouse Electric Corporation (Westinghouse). The record before us includes a statement of undisputed facts, an amended complaint and answer, and several other documents. For the reasons stated below, we answer the questions exclusively on the basis of the undisputed facts, which are substantially as follows.
*371 In March, 1983, one of the plaintiffs, Canal Electric Company (Canal), purchased from Westinghouse a set of rotating blades for use in a steam turbine generator, and related services. Westinghouse shipped the blades to Canal on March 19, 1983, and installed them in the turbine generator.
The contract governing the sale was one of two Westinghouse selling policies, either Selling Policy 1701 or Selling Policy 1270. The parties are in disagreement concerning which selling policy governs the sale; however, the two selling policies are virtually indistinguishable for purposes of our answer to the certified questions. Both selling policies contained exclusive warranty provisions, exclusive (i.e., limited) repair or replacement remedies, and clauses limiting total liability to the contract or order price of the goods and related services. These “Limitation of Liability” clauses specifically excluded indirect, special, incidental, and consequential damages. Canal does not assert that the contract terms were unconscionable.
Westinghouse sent Canal an invoice for the price of the blades on April 19, 1983. During an inspection on July 20, 1983, cracks were discovered in one or more of the blades. On August 8, 1983, Westinghouse issued to Canal a full credit for the price of the blades that had failed. The turbine generator returned to service on November 21, 1983, with replacement blades designed, manufactured, and installed by Westinghouse.
The case comes to us after a hearing in Federal court on Westinghouse’s motion for summary judgment. In addition to the statement of undisputed facts, the Federal judge has transmitted to us several other documents, including affidavits, exhibits, and an amended complaint, which in substance alleges wilful dilatoriness and repudiation of warranty obligations.
Because the certified questions come to us on the defendant’s motion for summary judgment, Canal asserts that in our answers we should resolve all factual disputes in its favor. The questions were certified to us pursuant to S.J.C. rule 1:03,
supra,
which provides that a certification order
*372
shall set forth “a statement of all facts relevant to the questions certified and showing fully the nature of the controversy in which the questions arose.”
Id.
at § 3 (2). The record before us is not fully developed on issues raised by Canal, as required by our rule, and those issues raise factual disputes that are not resolved. Nevertheless, we conclude that we can answer the certified questions if we confine our answers to the undisputed facts. We add that if, in the future, the “questions certified to us . . . are not accompanied by sufficient nonhypothetical, evidentiary facts to allow us to adequately determine” the answers, we may decline to answer such questions. See
Schlieter
v.
Carlos,
1. Question One. “Assuming that the Westinghouse exclusive remedy failed of its essential purpose, is the provision entitled Limitation of Liability enforceable under the circumstances alleged in this case?” We answer that the exclusion of consequential damages is enforceable on the undisputed facts.
Canal contends that, because the limited repair or replacement remedy failed of its essential purpose (an assumption all parties make for purposes of the certified question), 2 it is entitled to all the remedies for breach provided in the Uniform Commercial Code that would otherwise be excluded by the “Limitation of Liability” clauses of the selling policies, including consequential damages. Canal relies on G. L. c. 106, § 2-719 (2), which provides: “Where circumstances cause an exclusive or limited remedy to fail of its essential purpose, remedy may be had as provided in this chapter [i.e., the Code].”
*373 Westinghouse, on the other hand, argues that Canal is barred from recovering consequential damages despite the failure of the limited remedy, relying on G. L. c. 106, § 2-719 (3), which provides: “Consequential damages may be limited or excluded unless the limitation or exclusion is unconscionable.” Westinghouse asserts that the consequential damages disclaimer survives the failure of the limited remedy, because it is not unconscionable. Westinghouse argues that, even if Canal is entitled to direct and incidental damages, the disclaimer of consequential damages must stand because it is an entirely separate contractual provision from the limited remedy clause.
Nothing in § 2-719 or other provisions of the Code explains whether consequential damages may be recovered following the failure of a limited remedy if they are expressly excluded by a contract, as they are in this case. The tension between the two subsections of § 2-719 may be resolved by examining the purposes of the section as set forth in the Official Comment to § 2-719 of the Uniform Commercial Code, IB U.L.A. (Master ed. 1989). Comment 1 notes that “[u]nder this section parties are left free to shape their remedies to their particular requirements and reasonable agreements limiting or modifying remedies are to be given effect.” The comment continues: “However, it is of the very essence of a sales contract that at least minimum adequate remedies be available. If the parties intend to conclude a contract for sale within this Article, they must accept the legal consequence that there be at least a fair quantum of remedy for breach of the obligations or duties outlined in the contract.” Thus, § 2-719 was “intended to encourage and facilitate consensual allocations of risks associated with the sale of goods,” as long as minimum adequate remedies are available to a party injured by a breach.
V-M Corp.
v.
Barnard Distrib. Co.,
*374
Previously we noted that the consensual allocation of risk is not contrary to public policy.
Minassian
v.
Ogden Suffolk Downs, Inc.,
Here, Canal’s assent to the Westinghouse selling policies demonstrates a clear intent to accept the risk of consequential damages. The particular allocation of risk in the Westinghouse selling policies is one that has been recognized as common in the electric power generation industry. See, e.g.,
Public Serv. Co. of New Hampshire
v.
Westinghouse Elec. Corp.,
Moreover, under § 2-719 (2), Canal may recover any non-consequential Code damages, despite the “Limitation of Liability” provision. It is undisputed that Westinghouse already has issued to Canal a credit for the full purchase price of the faulty blades. This, and any other non-consequential damages under the Code, is a “minimum adequate remedy.” See § 2-719, comment 1.
Accordingly, on the limited facts before us, we conclude that the disclaimer of consequential damages is enforceable even though the limited repair or replacement remedy has failed of its essential purpose. The disclaimer of consequential damages is an entirely separate contractual provision from the limited repair or replacement remedy and thus survives the failure of the limited remedy. “The limited remedy of repair and a consequential damages exclusion are two discrete ways of attempting to limit recovery for breach of warranty. . . . The former survives unless it fails of its essential purpose, while the latter is valid unless it is unconscionable.” (Citations omitted.)
Chatlos Syss.
v.
National Cash Register Corp.,
In so ruling, we follow the principle that “the agreed-upon allocation of commercial risk should not be disturbed . . . where . . . the warranted item is a highly complex, sophisticated, and in some ways experimental piece of equipment.” American Elec. Power, supra at 458. Recent cases, particularly ones involving contracts among sophisticated commercial entities like the parties in this case, generally follow this rule, 3 although there is some disagreement among the *376 courts. 4 Cases awarding consequential damages generally arise from consumer transactions and involve “relatively uncomplicated products” like cars and tractors. 5 Those facts are not present in this case.
We add that consequential damages are awarded in cases in which the facts show wilful dilatoriness or repudiation of warranty obligations by the seller.
6
Although in its brief Ca
*377
nal argues wilful dilatoriness and repudiation, those facts are in dispute and thus are not properly before us.
7
See
Schlieter
v.
Carlos,
2. Question Two. “Assuming that the provision entitled Limitation of Liability is enforceable even if the Westinghouse exclusive remedy failed of its essential purpose, is such provision enforceable so as to bar remedies against Westinghouse under Mass. G.L. C.93A?” 8 We answer that it is, in the circumstances of this case.
Once the limited remedy failed of its essential purpose, Canal was entitled to all Code remedies for breach of warranty other than consequential damages. The question is whether Canal could validly waive its c. 93A, § 11, claim by assenting to the Limitation of Liability clause. We conclude that it could. 9
A statutory right or remedy may be waived when the waiver would not frustrate the public policies of the statute. For example, in
Continental Corp.
v.
Gowdy,
A statutory right may not be disclaimed if the waiver could “do violence to the public policy underlying the legislative enactment.”
Spence
v.
Reeder,
This dispute is essentially a private one in which Canal’s c. 93A, § 11, claim is duplicative of its breach of warranty claim. General Laws c. 93A “is not subject to the traditional limitations of preexisting causes of action,”
Slaney
v.
Westwood Auto, Inc.,
In this case, as in
Linthicum,
the c. 9 3A, § 11, claim arises from the breach of warranty and merely is an alternate theory of recovery under the contract. Moreover, the dispute is a purely commercial one that does not affect the public interest. See
Chestnut Hill Dev. Corp.
v.
Otis Elevator Co.,
Based on the undisputed facts, we answer both certified questions, “yes.”
Notes
Canal Electric, one of the plaintiffs, is in contractual privity with Westinghouse. The other plaintiffs áre Commonwealth Electric Company, Cambridge Electric Light Company, Montaup Electric Company, Boston Edison Company, Massachusetts Municipal Wholesale Electric Company, New England Power Company, and the Templeton Municipal Lighting Plant. They regularly purchase power from Canal. They seek damages for the cost of replacement power purchased during the time that Canal’s turbine generator was out of service. Because the question was not certified to us, we do not decide whether plaintiffs not in privity may recover consequential damages or damages under G. L. c. 93A. See G. L. c. 106, § 2-318. We limit ourselves to answering only the questions certified. See
Cabot Corp.
v.
Baddour,
In its brief, Westinghouse “contends that it fully performed its warranty obligations by repairing the blades and returning the turbine to service. . . . [Sjolely for the purposes of this appeal, Westinghouse assumes the repair/replacement remedy failed of its essential purpose.”
Because Westinghouse confines its argument to the issue of consequential damages, we assume that Westinghouse does not argue that nonconsequential Code damages are not recoverable.
See, e.g.,
Employers Ins. of Wausau
v.
Suwannee River Spa Lines, Inc.,
See
Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Md.
v.
Krebs Eng’rs,
See
Massey-Ferguson, Inc.
v.
Laird,
See, e.g.,
Fiorito Bros.
v.
Fruehauf Corp., 747
F.2d 1309 (9th Cir. 1984);
Soo Line R.R.
v.
Fruehauf Corp.,
Many of the courts following the rule that consequential damages may be excluded even when a limited remedy has failed of its essential purpose have indicated that they might hold otherwise if bad faith or wilful dilatoriness could be shown. See, e.g.,
Chatlos Syss.
v.
National Cash Register Corp.,
The parties also have used the term “bad faith” in their briefs. The cases on this issue generally refer to wilful dilatoriness or repudiation, not to bad faith.
Selling Policy 1270 provides, in part: “Purchaser expressly agrees that the remedies provided therein are exclusive and that neither Westinghouse nor its suppliers will under any circumstances be liable under any theory of recovery, whether based on contract; on negligence of any kind, strict liability or tort . . . or otherwise . . . .” (Emphasis added.) Selling Policy 1701 provides, in part: “Westinghouse . . . shall not be liable in contract, in tort (including negligence), strict liability or otherwise .. . .” (Emphasis added.)
We note that the Federal District Court for the District of Massachusetts has issued conflicting holdings on this issue. Compare
Chestnut Hill Dev. Corp.
v.
Otis Elevator Co.,
Chapter 93A authorizes the award of attorneys’ fees as well as actual damages. Thus, a plaintiff suing both for breach of warranty and under c. 93A would be entitled, if successful, to actual damages plus attorneys’ fees, but not to double recovery plus fees. See
Linthicum, supra
at 388. In circumstances of knowing and wilful violation of c. 93A or of bad-faith refusal to settle, a plaintiff also may be entitled to double or treble damages under c. 93A itself. See
International Fidelity Ins. Co.
v.
Wilson,
