This diversity breach of contract suit is before us for the second time; this time the question is whether the district judge disobeyed the directions in our first decision (reported at
On remand, Judge Mills made written findings on liability, but did not conduct a trial on damages. Instead he asked the parties to submit their proof of damages and on the basis of those submissions he recalculated Cole’s net damages as — zero. Gone were the incidental damages, almost $70,000 in the judge’s original damages ruling before he applied the 75 percent discount. Instead, the judge assessed consequential damages of $31,000 — but then cut that figure, tоo, down by 75 percent because Cole was only a 25 percent owner of the gas field. He then offset against the resulting damages figure a larger amount in lease payments due and unpaid before Cole had notified Ingersoll-Rand that it was canceling the lease. Judge Mills’s opinion contains no discussion of this court’s opinion and no explanation of why he failed to conduct a trial on damages as he had been told to do and to correct the errors that this court had identified. Again Cole’s request for the restitution of its lease payments was ignored.
The least controversial aspect of the law of the ease doctrine requires a lower court judge to comply with the rulings made by higher courts in the same case.
Sibbald v. United States,
Far from identifying any errors in the panel’s opinion or paring dicta from holdings and suggestions from directives, Judge Mills did not so much as mention the opinion. It is true that Cole’s briefs and other submissions in thе district court as in this court have been prolix, confusing, and frequently *610 belated and unresponsive. But the district court’s award of zero damages was not based on waiver or imposed as a sanction, and so far as we can discern from a muddy record, Cole has a case for a substantial award of damages — more than zero, in any event— though much less than the $1.5 million or so that it seeks.
Cole paid more than $56,000 — perhaps as much as $92,000 — under the lease before canceling it bеcause of the breach of warranty. The validity of the cancellation is no longer in question. So Cole is, prima facie at least, entitled to the return of these payments, with interest at 5 percent. Not 9 percent under 815 ILCS 205/4, as Cole аrgues; the applicable statute is 815 ILCS 205/2, interpreted in Art
Press Ltd. v. Western Printing Machinery Co.,
We have not finished with setoffs. To the еxtent that Cole, notwithstanding the breach of warranty, derived some value from the gas compressors before returning them to Inger-soll-Rand (yet not enough to preclude Cole’s rescinding, cf.
Fortin v. Ox-Bow Marina, Inc.,
We do not know what happened to Cole’s incidental damages. The judge had assessed them at almost $70,000 and the panel took that figure as a baseline for figuring damages. They disappeared in a puff of smoke in the opinion on remand. As for the consequential damages, by cutting them down on the basis of the co-ownership of the gas field Judge Mills violated our instructions. If new evidence was presented to him establishing аn error in our opinion on this question, he did not mention it. We also cannot determine from his opinion on remand whether in calculating consequential damages he restored the specific items that we said in our previous opinion he had erroneously excluded.
In all likelihood, however, the issues concerning incidental and consequential damages are academic. A provision in the lease, mentioned but not ruled on in our first opinion,
Of course if the lessee were always entitled to reсover in the event of a lessor’s breach all the payments he had made under the lease, the cap would have the practical effect of eliminating the lessee’s remedy in damages and limiting him to his right to rescind. Rescission is, howevеr, a remedy, and a limited remedy is unenforceable under the UCC only if it would “fail of its essential purpose.” UCC § 2-719(2). Waivers of consequential damages are not prohibited unless “unconscionable,” § 2-719(3), and the same principle has, sensibly in our view, been assumed applicable to waivers of incidental damages.
Xerox Corp. v. Hawkes,
The case must be remanded again, for further proceedings consistent with this and our previous opinion. Our circuit rule 36 provides that unless we direct otherwise а remanded case that has been tried shall be reassigned to a different district judge. This case was tried, but because one of the errors identified in our previous opinion was the trial judge’s failure to make required findings, the case was remanded to Judge Mills. He made those findings, thus completing the trial. Hence the remand that we are ordering today will result in reassignment to a different judge.
Reversed and Remanded.
