*318 OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Compañía Embotelladora Del Pacifico, S.A. (“CEPSA”) seeks damages for the alleged breach by defendant Pepsi Cola Company (“PepsiCo”) of an Exclusive Bottler Appointment Agreement that appointed CEPSA as PepsiCo’s exclusive bottler for certain parts of Peru. PepsiCo, in turn, alleges that CEPSA is liable for unpaid invoices for concentrate sold to it by PepsiCo.
PepsiCo now moves to exclude the opinions and testimony of two of CEPSA’s experts, and, in a related motion, moves for summary judgment dismissing CEP-SA’s sole remaining breach of contract claim. CEPSA, in turn, moves for partial summary judgment dismissing PepsiCo’s Concentrate Counterclaim. The parties submitted voluminous briefing in support of their respective motions, and on July 15, 2009 the Court heard oral argument. Upon careful consideration, all three motions are granted.
By way of background, on June 6, 1952, CEPSA and PepsiCo entered into an Exclusive Bottler Appointment Agreement (“EBA” or “Agreement”), pursuant to which PepsiCo appointed CEPSA as “its exclusive Bottler, to bottle, sell and distribute the [Pepsi-Cola] beverage” within certain territories in Peru. Declaration of Erin Durba (“Durba Deck”) Ex. 33 ¶ 1. CEPSA agreed that it would “bottle sell and distribute the [Pepsi-Cola] beverage only in the [appointed territory],” and that it would “not, directly or indirectly, bottle, sell or distribute the Beverage in any other Territory.” Id. Pursuant to the EBA (and a variety of subsequent amendments thereto), PepsiCo, from 1952 until April 1999, sold soft drink concentrate to CEP-SA, which then used the concentrate to create, bottle, and distribute bottled product in CEPSA’s territory. Id. ¶¶ 1, 2, 5; Ex. 99. The EBA, which has no definite term and is terminable at will by either party, see 12/18/08 transcript; 4/13/09 Order, does not contain any other express provision concerning PepsiCo’s obligation with respect to preventing, monitoring, policing, or controlling the sale or distribution of its product within CEPSA’s territory. See Durba Deck Ex. 33.
Against this background, CEPSA here seeks to prove that PepsiCo breached the EBA’s exclusivity provision by failing to stop, police, or otherwise prevent “transshipping,” ie., the sale of PepsiCo products in CEPSA’s exclusive territory by bottlers, distributors, or other third-parties.
In support of its claim for damages, CEPSA relies on the opinions and testimony of two expert witnesses: Graham Searles, an accountant and former general manager of a Peruvian Coca-Cola bottler, who estimates CEPSA’s damages as totaling in excess of $236 million, Declaration of Gerald Sawczyn (“Sawczyn Deck”) Ex. A at 1-2 (“Searles Report”), and Julio Luque, a marketing consultant, who offers certain opinions concerning the sales volume data used to calculate CEPSA’s alleged damages. Sawcyzn Deck Ex. D (“Luque Report”). PepsiCo moves to strike the opinions and testimony of both of these witnesses, arguing that neither meets the requirements of reliability and the like set forth in Rule 702, Fed.R.Evid., and in
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms.,
Under Fed.R.Evid. 702, an expert’s testimony, in order to be admissible, must,
inter alia,
be “based upon sufficient facts or data” and be “the product of reliable principles and methods.” Thus, an expert’s testimony must be excluded if it is
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“speculative or conjectural,” or if it is “based on assumptions that are so unrealistic and contradictory” that the testimony amounts, in essence, to an “apples and oranges comparison.”
Boucher v. U.S. Suzuki Motor Corp.,
Searles’ estimated damages figure, to which the Court initially turns, is calculated as follows. First, Searles estimates the total volume of PepsiCo products sold in Lima, Peru (which was included in CEPSA’s exclusive territory), based on figures obtained from the market research firm Consumer Communications Research (“CCR”). Searles Report at 4. Searles concedes that these figures are inaccurate, in that they understate sales volume, but attempts to correct this inaccuracy by adjusting the data upwards by 22.5%, based on an assertion that “marketing experts and others” “generally believe” that CCR understates market volume to this degree. Id. Second, Searles subtracts the amount of CEPSA’s own reported sales of PepsiCo products to determine the amount of nonCEPSA PepsiCo products transshipped into Lima. Id. Although CCR data is only available for the city of Lima, Searles nevertheless proceeds to extend these transshipment figures to non-Lima areas by assuming that transshipment would occur in those areas in the same proportion that it occurred inside Lima. Id. at 5-6. Third, Searles proceeds to assume that all of the alleged transshipping would have been prevented in a “but for” world, and that CEPSA would have made each and every one of those sales that were made by bottlers or distributors other than CEPSA. Fourth, Searles calculates CEPSA’s purported lost profits on these lost sales by applying CEPSA’s historical marginal profit rate. Id. at 6.
An even cursory review of these damages calculations demonstrates that they are based on what Searles himself concedes to be unreliable and inaccurate data, together with a series of assumptions that have no basis in fact or reality. Searles Report at 4. Indeed, Searles stated at his deposition that he was unaware of anyone who has ever relied on CCR data as a measure of market volume and that he knew of no scientific studies validating or confirming its accuracy for that purpose. Sawezyn Decl. Ex. C at 54-63. 1 Although Searles attempts to “correct” these inaccuracies, neither he nor CEPSA’s counsel have pointed to any analysis, studies, or facts to confirm the reliability of his methods of correction. Instead, Searles merely stated at his deposition that he had “no *320 reason to believe that it was not accurate.” Id. at 57-58. 2 Moreover, any inaccuracies in the CCR data were compounded by Searles’ decision to extrapolate those figures to CEPSA’s non-Lima sales territories, based on an assumption that transshipping occurred in those areas in the same proportion to CEPSA’s sales as he believed it occurred in Lima. When asked to explain the basis for this assumption, Searles merely responded that “there’s no reason to assume that it wasn’t” in the same proportion. Id. at 232.
Notwithstanding these deficiencies, Searles, in his rebuttal report, compares his adjusted CCR market volume data against the sales volume for Coke products in Lima, which apparently corroborate each other. Sawczyn Deck Ex. B (“Searles Rebutal Report”) at 4-5. Searles fails to demonstrate how this comparison bears any relevance to CCR’s market volume data for PepsiCo products in Lima, and, in any event, such after-the-fact analysis is not a proper way to determine the accuracy of data that Searles already had assumed to be accurate.
See, e.g., Solorio v. Asplundh Tree Expert Co.,
02 CV 8035,
Searles’ “displacement theory” is similarly based on a series of unsupported assumptions. Specifically, as noted, Searles’ damages calculations are based, in part, on an assumption that in the absence of transshipping, CEPSA would have made additional sales equal to the volume of transshipped sales.
See
Sawczyn Deck Ex. C at 22, 26. Searles does not point to any evidence or analysis in support of this assumption, however, and instead merely states at his deposition that he “saw no reason why [transshipped product] would not have [displaced CEPSA product.”
Id.
at 22-22, 26. In his rebuttal report, Searles supports his displacement theory with an opinion on “inter-brand price elasticity,” Searles Rebuttal Report at 12, but offers no calculations or analysis to support this opinion. He performed no econometric analysis and could not identify any published studies or analyses that supported his theory. Sawczyn Deck Ex. C at 30-31, 34. Instead, he based his opinion on his “practical experience as general manager of the Coca Cola bottler.”
Id.
at 30. Such experience does not, for these purposes, come close to satisfying the requirements of
Daubert
and its progeny.
See Algarin v. Dep’t of Corr.,
*321
Obviously, “nothing in either
Daubert
or the Federal Rules of Evidence requires a district court to admit opinion evidence which is connected to existing data only by the
ipse dixit
of the experts.”
Gen. Elec. Co. v. Joiner, 522 U.S.
136, 146,
Exclusion of Luque’s opinions with regard to the accuracy of the CCR sales volume data is likewise warranted, for many of the reasons previously stated. Luque, like Searles, opines that CCR sales volume data is “reasonably accurate.” Luque Report at 4, 20. Although Luque notes that “[i]t is generally understood in the industry that the CCR Reports understated actual sales by no less than 20% to 25%,” id. at 4, 20, he fails to cite to a single study or report to support this claim, nor did he conduct any statistical analysis. Sawczyn Decl. Ex. F at 237-38 (“I am pretty sure of what I am saying ... I have no need to test specifically”). Luque appears to rely on the same unspecified “report” regarding CCR data that Searles did and points to several pieces of testimony that purport to support his opinions, id. Ex. E (“Luque Rebuttal Report”) at 8-9, but, like Searles, fails to point to any actual data or analysis to support his contention. Accordingly, without any reliable basis for Luque’s opinions, such opinions must be excluded. 4
Turning next to PepsiCo’s motion for summary judgment dismissing CEPSA’s
*322
breach of contract claim, the Court is faced with the question of whether the damages sought by CEPSA are general, thus merely requiring a “reasonable estimate” of damages before an award can be made, or instead consequential, thus requiring CEP-SA to prove such damages “with reasonable certainty.”
See Tractebel Energy Mktg. v. AEP Power Mktg.,
As a general matter, “lost profits” constitute “general damages” when “the non-breaching party seeks only to recover money that the breaching party agreed to pay under the contract.”
Id.
at 109. Such damages are “the direct and probable consequence of the breach,” and amount to “precisely what the non-breaching party bargained for.”
Id.
Lost profits are properly considered consequential damages, by contrast, “when, as a result of the breach, the non-breaching party suffers loss or profits on collateral business relationships.”
Id.
(citation omitted);
see Spang Indus., Inc. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.,
Here, CEPSA is plainly not seeking to recover money that PepsiCo agreed to pay under the EBA.
Cf. Tractebel,
Because CEPSA is seeking to recover consequential damages, it is required to demonstrate “with certainty that such damages have been caused by the breach,” and that the alleged loss is “capable of proof with reasonable certainty.”
Kenford Co. v. Cty. of Erie,
Even if CEPSA could point to admissible expert testimony regarding damages, or to admissible evidence capable of proving damages to a reasonable certainty, its breach of contract claim nevertheless fails as a matter of law. Under New York law (here applicable), “if ‘a contract is straightforward and unambiguous, its interpretation presents a question of law for the court to be made without resort to extrinsic evidence.’ ”
Postlewaite v. McGraw-Hill, Inc.,
Here, as noted, the EBA expressly and unambiguously appoints CEPSA as PepsiCo’s exclusive bottler with a prescribed territory in Peru, and forbids CEPSA from selling PepsiCo outside of that territory. Thus, at a bare minimum, the EBA prohibited PepsiCo from appointing another bottler to serve CEPSA’s exclusive territory or selling PepsiCo product directly into that territory. CEPSA has failed to point to any evidence, however, demonstrating that PepsiCo did either.
CEPSA, though, appears to argue that the EBA somehow obligated PepsiCo to take affirmative steps to prevent other bottlers and third-parties from selling PepsiCo in CEPSA’s territory. The EBA does not contain any express language concerning these obligations, however, and in the face of an unambiguous contract, the Court hereby declines to read such obligations into the EBA.
See, e.g., Jackson Dairy, Inc. v. H.P. Hood & Sons, Inc.,
With no express breach of any provision contained in the EBA, CEPSA’s only theory of recovery must thus arise out of an allegation of breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, pursuant to which a contracting party is prevented from doing “anything which will have the effect of destroying or injuring the right of the other party to receive the fruits of the contract.”
Dalton v. Educ. Testing Serv.,
Accordingly, because CEPSA never alleged (nor sought to allege) a breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing at any point during the course of this now nine-year-old litigation, it cannot now seek to support its case under such a theory.
See Augienello v. Coast-To-Coast Fin. Corp.,
Moreover, even if properly alleged, CEPSA’s breach of contract claim still fails, because New York law does not recognize a claim for breach of an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing in “at-will” contracts like the one at issue here.
Cf. Nunez v. A-T Fin. Info. Inc.,
And even if such a duty could be implied into the EBA, it nevertheless cannot be used to impose “obligations that were not explicitly part of the agreement.”
Ari & Co. v. Regent Int’l Corp.,
Accordingly, for each and all of the foregoing reasons (any one of which is alone sufficient), the Court hereby grants Pepsi-Co’s motion for summary judgment dismissing CEPSA’s breach of contract claim.
CEPSA, in turn, moves for partial summary judgment dismissing PepsiCo’s Concentrate Counterclaim, arguing that this Court should defer to an Order issued in related bankruptcy proceedings pending in Peru that acknowledged and recognized PepsiCo’s Concentrate Claim in the full amount sought by PepsiCo, plus interest, and that granted fifth priority status to PepsiCo’s claim. 5 See Declaration of Dr. Hugo Florez ¶ 5 and Ex. 1.
In opposing CEPSA’s motion, PepsiCo argues that partial summary judgment is improper because PepsiCo’s Concentrate Claim is just one portion of a single claim for relief that also seeks damages relating to certain marketing expenses. When a party seeks partial summary judgment dismissing a portion of a particular claim, however, “it is the claims at issue rather than the number of formal counts which determines whether summary judgment may be sought.”
Primavera Familienstifung v. Askin,
As to the merits of CEPSA’s mo.tion, courts in this Circuit have long held
*326
that under the doctrine of international comity, the decisions of a foreign court are entitled to recognition in United States courts so long as “the foreign court is a court of competent jurisdiction” and “the laws and public policy of the forum state and the rights of its residents will not be violated.”
Cunard S.S. Co. v. Salen Reefer Serv.,
Here, not only has PepsiCo submitted its Concentrate Claim to the Peruvian administrative agency charged overseeing CEPSA’s liquidation, but also that agency has, in fact, already set forth the claim in a final judgment, detailing the existence of the claim, the principal amount due, the amount of interest, and the priority of the claim. Thus, all that is left with respect to that claim is for the foreign bankruptcy proceeding to discharge the Concentrate Claim obligation in accordance with Peruvian bankruptcy law. Any attempt by PepsiCo in this action to obtain relief as to its Concentrate Claim would, in essence, amount to an effort to frustrate the priority of claims already established by the Peruvian courts.
See, e.g., Cunard S.S. Co.,
The parties are directed to jointly call Chambers no later than September 11, 2009, to schedule a prompt trial of Pepsi-Co’s remaining counterclaim, the only remaining claim in this case. The Clerk of the Court is directed to close document numbers 116, 118, and 123 on the Court’s docket.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. In defending the accuracy of the CCR data, CEPSA notes that such data is routinely relied on by PepsiCo and others familiar with the soft drink industry in Peru. CEPSA also contends that PepsiCo's Peruvian Country Head, Eduardo Carriquiry, endorsed the use of such data. CEPSA has failed, however, to point to any instance in which PepsiCo (or any other participant in the Peruvian soft drink industry) ever used CCR data to measure actual sales volume, as opposed to estimate relative market share or trends. Cf. Sawczyn Decl. Ex. C at 58, 62.
. CEPSA contends that PepsiCo executives and an unspecified “report” indicated that the adjustment was appropriate, but, once again, fails to point to any actual data or analysis to support this contention. Indeed, Searles' report it notable for its lack of any regression studies, analyses, tests, or calculations confirming the validity of his assumptions. CEPSA also points to a study that purportedly confirms that 11-16% of the market was not surveyed by CCR (thus somehow providing a basis for the 22.5% adjustment), Sawczyn Deck Ex. E at 8, but that study merely concluded that 84% of consumers purchased soft drinks from the surveyed retailers, not that 84% of all soft drink purchases were made from those retailers. See Forbes Deck Ex. B. At 156-57.
. Indeed, at least to a certain extent, Searles' own testimony appears to contradict his own economic assumptions, in that he conceded that retailers who are given the opportunity to purchase transshipped product at a certain low price-point would likely buy more of that product than they would of CEPSA’s higher *321 priced product. See, e.g., Sawczyn Decl. Ex. C at 38.
. Apparently out of a concern that the opinions of its expert witnesses would be excluded, CEPSA, in opposing PepsiCo’s
Daubert
motion, submitted a declaration from Manuel Tirado, CEPSA’s former General Manager and Chief Financial Officer, who seeks to offer lay testimony concerning CEPSA's claimed damages.
See
Declaration of Manuel Tirado. CEPSA never identified Tirado as a damages witness, however, and, in any event, nothing in his declaration indicates that his purported lay opinions concerning CEPSA's claimed damages are based on his own personal knowledge or “rationally based on [his] perception,” thus demonstrating that his opinions cannot satisfy the requirements of Rules 602 and 701 for lay opinion testimony.
Id.
¶ 5 (“I list and describe below documents from which transshipment damages can be determined”);
id.
¶ 6 (“Based on these documents, it is clear that CEPSA has suffered quantifiable damages from transshipping. If called to testify, I am prepared to explain to the jury the damages demonstrated by these documents”);
see United States v. Rea,
. CEPSA also argues that PepsiCo's Concentrate Counterclaim is barred under the doctrine of
res judicata.
It is well-established, however, "that United States courts are not
obliged
to recognize judgments rendered by a foreign state, but may
choose
to give res judicata effect to foreign judgments on the basis of comity.”
Diorinou v. Mezitis,
