After a corporation bought an airplane pursuant to two separate written agreements, it claimed that the airplane was defective. The buyer sold the airplane back to the seller for considerably less than its original price, then sued the seller and the manufacturer of the airplane for damages, invoking the diversity jurisdiction of a federal district court in Louisiana. The resolution of this litigation depends on whether we apply the law of Louisiana, where the two agreements were executed and where the buyer received and used the airplane and later filed suit, or the law of Kansas, which was elected in one of the two agreements. There is, and can be, no dispute that, because our jurisdiction is based on diversity, we must apply Louisiana’s rules in making this critical decision.
Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co.,
Construing the two agreements together, we conclude that in this case Louisiana courts would apply Kansas law and require the seller to perform express contractual warranties, but not the Louisiana implied warranty against redhibitory, or hidden, defects, or any warranties implied under Kansas law. We, therefore, reverse the judgment in favor of the buyer based on the Louisiana implied warranty, and remand for further proceedings to determine whether the buyer has a cause of action under Kansas law, which is, in this litigation, surrogate Louisiana law.
I
As found by the district court, with ample support in the record, Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a), these are the facts. Delhomme Industries, Inc. (“DI”), a Louisiana corporation, sells and rents large generators and related equipment to companies that explore for and produce oil and gas. Richard *1053 Delhomme is its principal stockholder and chief executive officer. He was a pilot and either he or the corporation has owned a number of airplanes.
In March 1977, DI owned a twin-engine Cessna 340 A/II. Delhomme decided that DI should buy a larger and faster airplane. After surveying the market, Delhomme decided on a Beech B-100 King Air and entered into negotiations with Houston Beechcraft, Inc. (“HB”), a corporation domiciled in Houston, Texas. HB sells and services airplanes manufactured by Beech Aircraft Corporation, a corporation domiciled in Wichita, Kansas.
Delhomme agreed to buy a Beech B-100 King Air from HB. The airplane had been used as a demonstrator, but was to be sold under the same warranty as if it were new. The airplane, however, was in Denver, Colorado, and Delhomme had not inspected it. On March 30, 1977, Delhomme and a representative of HB signed an agreement for the purchase of the airplane. In the blanks provided on the printed form that they used, they stated that the price of the airplane was $842,000, which was to be paid in part by DI’s transfer of its Cessna, valued at $170,000, to HB. The agreement stated that DI had paid $50,000 in cash and was to pay the balance of $622,000 in cash upon delivery of the airplane. The agreement listed seven “Contingencies of Sale,” 1 in-cluding provisions that the airplane was “to be delivered to Purchaser free of squawks,” and that the sale was “[sjubject to Purchaser obtaining suitable financing.” Delhomme was to be flown to Denver to inspect the airplane. If he did not then accept it, the $50,000 deposit would be refunded, but he would be charged $1,700 for the trip to Denver.
In April 1977, Delhomme and DI’s chief pilot, Leo Carlin, went to Denver where, after inspecting the airplane, they accepted it. Dave Yount, a Beech Aircraft Corporation pilot, then flew the airplane to Houston with Delhomme and Carlin aboard. The three then flew to DI’s home office in New Iberia, Louisiana, where Yount instructed Delhomme and Carlin how to use the airplane. Apparently in New Iberia (although an attestation was executed in Houston), Delhomme signed a second agreement, dated April 6, on behalf of DI. This agreement provided the “suitable financing” on which the first agreement had been conditioned.
After the airplane was delivered, DI reported a number of problems which the district court set forth in detail in its opinion. The district court found that none of these problems resulted from DI’s failure to operate the airplane in accordance with the manufacturer’s instructions.
DI operated the airplane for seven months, during which it paid monthly financing installments greater than $12,000 per month. In October, DI grounded the airplane because of the claimed defects. Delhomme wrote to HB seeking to get it to make the necessary repairs. HB responded in November, when it flew the airplane to Houston for repairs. It removed the left engine and discovered heat damage, which it contended resulted from improper starting of the airplane. HB demanded that DI pay the cost of the engine repair work, estimated to be between $10,000 and $12,-000, before HB did any other repair work. The district judge found, however, that the engine damage was attributable to faulty instruments and was chargeable to HB, not DI.
*1054 Three weeks after the dispute about the engine repairs, DI sold the airplane to HB for $625,000. HB paid $6,000 in cash and canceled the amount due on the purchase agreement. The parties executed no writing concerning the effect of this transaction, and the district judge found as a fact that the parties did not intend it to be a compromise. Later, after repairing the airplane, HB sold it to a third party for $662,-500.
II
The March 30 agreement is on a printed form apparently prepared by Beech Aircraft Corporation. Although it is captioned “Airplane Purchase Order,” it provides: “This purchase order when accepted by Seller becomes a binding contract of purchase and sale .... [Tjhis purchase order, when accepted by Seller, is the only contract controlling this sale and purchase, and ... contains all agreements, express or implied, either verbal or in writing . . . . ” It sets forth a manufacturer’s limited warranty together with a manufacturer’s limited remedy of repair or replacement of defective parts 2 for breach of warranties. Another provision, printed in uppercase type, states: “To the extent allowed by applicable law, the obligations of manufacturer [Beech Aircraft] set forth herein shall be the exclusive remedies for any breach of warranty hereunder, and, to the same extent neither manufacturer nor seller shall be liable for any general, consequential or incidental damages . . . . ” As we have already noted, note 1 supra, a sentence is typed on the front of the form that appears to be an express warranty—“Aircraft to be delivered to Purchaser free of squawks.”
The April 6 agreement, which according to HB supersedes the March 30 agreement, is on a printed, legal-sized form captioned with the words “Beech Acceptance Corporation, Inc.” Near the top of the form, immediately below those words, is a line with the words “Retail Installment Contract,” and immediately below that line are the words “Conditional Sales Contract and Security Agreement.” About two inches below these words is this statement: “Secured Party [HB] hereby sells the aircraft described [below] to Debtor [DI].” On the back of the form, about three inches from the top, in uppercase, boldface type, is the following statement: “There are no express warranties unless they appear in writing signed by the seller and there are no implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose made in connection with the sale of the collateral.” 3 About one inch below this statement, under the heading “Additional Agreements and Affirmations,” is the choice of law provision: “The law governing this secured transaction shall be that of the State of Kansas in force at the date of this Security Agreement.” Below this, near the middle of the form, is the following statement in uppercase type: “Notice to the Buyer: Do not sign this contract before you read it . . . . ”
The district court found that the warranties in the March 30 agreement were “in writing and signed by the seller” and that “the parties intended these representations to survive the execution of the April 6 contract.” It found that “squawk-free” meant that HB was required to provide DI with “a like-new aircraft . . . free of defects which could be operated trouble-free during the early life of the airplane.” 4 The *1055 district court then held that the sale was “a Louisiana sale,” and, applying Louisiana law, concluded that Delhomme did not waive the implied warranty against redhibi-tory vices and defects under La.Civ.Code Ann. arts. 2474-2475, 2520-2548 (West 1952 & Cum.Supp.1981). 5 The district court made no finding concerning the applicability of the choice of law provision in the April 6 agreement.
Applying Louisiana law, the district court also found that the airplane had hidden defects, that the buyer’s claim was to be treated as one in quanti minoris (reduction of the price) rather than rescission, and calculated DI’s damages as the difference between the initial purchase price, $842,000, and the price paid on the sale of the airplane back to HB, $625,000, amounting to a net of $217,000. It also allowed DI to recover attorney’s fees, and offset the value of DI’s use of the airplane against the amount DI paid on the installment note, insurance, and other costs of operation.
Ill
Before trial, both DI and HB moved for partial summary judgment to determine which state’s substantive law governed the sale. HB argued that Kansas law governed the sale, that DI thus had no cause of action under Louisiana law, and that DI’s claim under Louisiana law should, therefore, be dismissed. DI, however, argued that Louisiana law governed the sale.
The district court denied HB’s motion to dismiss DI’s claim. 6 Later, in the opinion it rendered after the trial, the district court held that “[rjegardless of whether the March 30 or April 6 contract transmitted title of the B-100 aircraft from Houston Beechcraft to Delhomme, this sale is a Louisiana sale to the extent of determining what warranties were implied with the sale.”
HB argues that this holding is wrong because the April 6 agreement, which HB contends is the contract governing the sale, contains a choice of law clause that requires Kansas law to be applied. DI argues, in opposition, that the March 30 agreement governs the sale, and that the choice of law provision in the April 6 agreement is, therefore, irrelevant. DI also argues that, even if the April 6 agreement were the contract governing the sale, “Louisiana public policy [would] prohibit the application of Kansas law” pursuant to that agreement’s choice of law clause. Thus, according to DI, because both agreements were executed in Louisiana, and the trial court correctly held that neither agreement is governed by the choice of law provision, Louisiana law must apply to the sale.
IV
We turn now to the first two questions; (1) Which agreement governs the sale of the airplane? (2) If the April 6 agreement governs the sale, in whole or in part, is its choice of law provision valid?
*1056
Two corporations, each represented by experienced businessmen, signed two separate agreements. There is no evidence that they intended either to be read in isolation. There is no evidence that the first was to stand alone. And as the trial court found, there is no evidence that the second was to supersede the first,
7
which contained carefully negotiated terms
8
typed and written on a printed form.
9
The first was subject to conditions, one of which, adequate financing, was supplied by the second.
See Admiral Paint Co. v. Goltzman,
[I]t is well-settled law that several writings executed between the same parties substantially at the same time and relating to the same subject-matter may be read together as forming parts of one transaction, nor is it necessary that the instruments should in terms refer to each other if in point of fact they are parts of a single transaction.
Bailey v. Railroad Co.,
V
The contract thus confected contains the express “squawk-free” warranty, the express manufacturer’s limited warranty, a waiver of all other warranties, the manufacturer’s limited remedy of repair or replacement for breach of warranties, and a provision that the sale be governed by Kansas law. We must now determine whether the choice of law provision should be given effect. This issue comprises two distinct questions; 11 (1) Would a Louisiana court permit contracting parties to choose the body of law to be applied in interpreting and enforcing their contract? and (2) Would a Louisiana court recognize this particular choice of law provision, and apply Kansas law? We conclude that the answer to both of these questions is “Yes.”
I. HB contends that Louisiana courts recognize and honor contractual choice of law provisions. In support, it relies primarily on the argument that Louisiana has adopted the Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws (1969), 12 which permits parties *1057 to stipulate in their contract the law that is to govern it. 13 HB argues, therefore, that a Louisiana court would, as an initial matter, consider applying the choice of law provision in the April 6 agreement.
Although DI never addresses this point directly, it apparently contends that, in this case, a Louisiana court would not follow the rules prescribed by the Restatement (Second), but instead would apply the traditional rule of lex loci contractus. Under this rule, “the effect attributed to a contract and the rights, duties and obligations of the parties arising thereunder and flowing therefrom are, as a general rule, to be determined by the laws of the state in which the contract is executed.” Delta Equip. & Constr. Co. v. Cook, 142 So.2d 427, 430 (La.App.1962). 14 DI therefore urges us to conclude that, because both the March 30 and the April 6 agreements were executed in Louisiana, Louisiana law, and not Kansas law, governs the sale of the airplane.
In the absence of a choice of applicable law by the parties, some recent Louisiana cases, as well as federal cases applying Louisiana law, have followed the Restatement (Second),
15
although others have followed the traditional rule of lex loci contractus.
16
Louisiana courts, however, permit parties to stipulate in their contract which state’s law will govern the contract, in accordance with the principles set forth in § 187(1) of the Restatement (Second).
See Porter v. American Optical Corp.,
2. This conclusion leads us to the question whether, on the facts of this case, a Louisiana court would honor the choice of law provision and apply Kansas Law.
See Baton Rouge Bldg. Trades Council v. T. L. James & Co.,
The choice of law provision in effect waives DI’s redhibitory rights: it substitutes Kansas law for Louisiana law, and redhibitory rights are available only under Louisiana law. DI argues that “Louisiana public policy [would] prohibit the appliea *1058 tion of Kansas law” because “Louisiana has clearly adopted a public policy against easy waiver” of redhibitory rights. 18 DI contends, therefore, that the choice of law provision is invalid because it violates Louisiana public policy, and that Louisiana law thus governs the sale.
Before passing on the validity of the choice of law provision, we must consider several general principles. The Louisiana rule on contractual choice of law provisions is that “[w]here parties stipulate the State law governing the contract, Louisiana conflict of laws principles require that the stipulation be given effect, unless there is statutory or jurisprudential law to the contrary or strong public policy considerations justifying the refusal to honor the contract as written.”
Associated Press v. Toledo Invs., Inc.,
With these principles in mind, we turn to the facts of this case. Both DI and HB are corporations, and each is engaged in extensive business enterprises. The contract was for the sale of an airplane for DI’s business.
23
The airplane sale is a multistate transaction: DI is a Louisiana corporation, HB is a Texas corporation, and Beech Aircraft Corporation is a Kansas corporation. The cost of the airplane, including financing, exceeded $1 million. Richard Delhomme, who signed the contract for DI, has been the president and owner of DI since it was founded almost twenty years ago. He also owns interests in three other companies. In his work with DI, which sells and services oilfield equipment, he has occasion to deal with equipment warranties. He testified that he bought the airplane after making “an extensive study” of DI’s needs.
24
He had previously purchased six to eight airplanes. He bargained over, and was able to affect the terms of, the contract of sale.
25
That the choice of law provision is part of a printed form contract does not invalidate it,
26
especially since DI itself is suing to enforce the terms of that contract.
Davis v. Humble Oil & Ref. Co.,
Most important, DI has never shown that under Louisiana law, parties may not, either by acting under Louisiana law or by choosing another state’s law, waive their redhibitory rights.
Cf. Associated Press v. Toledo Invs., Inc.,
VI
In its amended complaint, DI says that it “is entitled to all of the rights and remedies afforded by the laws of the State of Kansas in existance [sic] at the time the [contract] was entered into insofar as” the allegations in its amended complaint would allow. Having determined that Kansas law governs the sale of the airplane, we now apply that law and dispose of parts of this case. We do so because additional proceedings on these parts in the district court are unnecessary, and because ending the litigation on them would further judicial economy and efficiency.
Chamberlain v. Kurtz,
We note at the outset two preliminary points. First, the Kansas Consumer Protection Act, Kan.Stat.Ann. §§ 50-623 to -644 (1976 & Supp.1980), does not apply to this sale. DI is a corporation, not an “individual,” and thus does not qualify as a “consumer” under the Act. See id. § 50-624(b), (f), Kansas comments b, j. 34 Hence we apply the Uniform Commercial Code, as adopted in Kansas, to the sale.
Second, HB argues that DI’s sale of the airplane back to HB constitutes, under Louisiana law, a compromise of DI’s claim, which bars DI from bringing suit. The district court, however, rejected this argument, and found that the parties did not *1061 intend that the sale effect a compromise of DI’s claims.
The common law doctrine of accord and satisfaction embraces the Louisiana doctrine of compromise.
See Barnes v. Mid-Continent Cas. Co.,
We now turn to DI’s warranty claims. Kan.Stat.Ann. § 84-2-316(2) provides:
to exclude or modify the implied warranty of merchantability or any part of it the language must mention merchantability and in case of a writing must be conspicuous, and to exclude or modify any implied warranty of fitness the exclusion must be by a writing and conspicuous. Language to exclude all implied warranties of fitness is sufficient if it states, for example, that “There are no warranties which extend beyond the description on the face hereof.”
Kan.Stat.Ann. § 84-1-201(10) defines “conspicuous” as follows:
A term or clause is conspicuous when it is so written that a reasonable person against whom it is to operate ought to have noticed it. A printed heading in capitals (as: NON-NEGOTIABLE BILL OF LADING) is conspicuous. Language in the body of a form is “conspicuous” if it is in larger or other contrasting type or color. But in a telegram any stated term is “conspicuous.” Whether a term or clause is “conspicuous” or not is for decision by the court.
Despite the lack of Kansas case law definitively interpreting these two sections,
J&W Equip., Inc. v. Weingartner,
This issue turns on whether the waiver of the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness was sufficiently conspicuous, which is a question of law.
See George C. Christopher & Son v. Kansas Paint & Color Co.,
We conclude that the contract meets this test. The disputed waiver is in the April 6 agreement,
35
which we described above, p. 1054
supra.
The waiver is in boldface, uppercase type. It stands out among the words around it. It is on the same side of the contract as the signatures, including Delhomme’s signature. It contains the word “merchantability.” It is on the contract itself, and not, for example, on a post-contract document like an invoice. And the contract contains a prominent warning to read the contract before signing it. This waiver is, therefore, conspicuous under Kansas law.
Atlas Indus.
v.
National Cash Register Co.,
Furthermore, the “squawk-free” warranty does nothing to vitiate the waiver. Even if, as the trial court apparently concluded, under Louisiana law the “squawk-free” warranty suggests that DI did not intend to waive implied warranties, it has no such effect under Kansas law. Under Kansas law, an implied warranty may be coextensive with an express warranty.
See Atlas Indus. v. National Cash Register Co.,
DI’s only valid ground for complaint, therefore, is HB’s alleged failure to comply with the express “squawk-free” warranty. The contract provides that the manufacturer’s limited remedy “shall be the exclusive remed[y] for any breach of warranty” under the contract. Thus the contract limits DPs remedy for breach of the “squawk-free” warranty to repair or replacement of the parts that made the airplane violate that warranty.
This limitation is valid under Kansas law. It satisfies the requirements of Kan.Stat.Ann. § 84-2-719(1) (1965),
36
and is not unconscionable under § 84-2-719(3).
37
As stated by the court in
Kansas City Structural Steel Co. v. L. G. Barcus & Sons,
The policy of the law in general is to permit mentally competent parties to arrange their own contracts and fashion their own remedies where no fraud or overreaching is practiced. Contracts freely arrived at and fairly made are favorites of the law. None of the parties here involved were neophytes or babes in the brambles of the business world. Both companies, it would appear, dealt in projects involving considerable sums of money; both operated substantial business enterprises; and there is no suggestion that their businesses were not capably managed and profitably operated.
Id.
at 95,
However, one other issue remains: the possibility that the manufacturer’s limited remedy “faile[d] of its essential purpose” under Kan.Stat.Ann. § 84-2-719(2). If it did, then DI would not be limited to the manufacturer’s limited remedy, but could instead go beyond it and recover damages. Id. official UCC comment 1; J. White & R. Summers, supra, § 12-10.
Although the trial court found that the airplane contained redhibitory vices, we cannot necessarily equate that with a finding that the manufacturer’s lim
*1063
ited remedy failed of its essential purpose. The basic test in a redhibitory action is what the buyer would have done if, at the time of sale, he had known of the product’s hidden vices or defects.
E.g., Perrin
v.
Read Imports, Inc.,
Unlike the question whether DI has a § 84-2-719(3) unconscionability claim, which is a question of law, the question whether the circumstances in this case justify a § 84-2-719(2) action by DI against either HB or Beech Aircraft Corporation is a question of fact.
Johnson v. John Deere Co.,
REVERSED IN PART AND REMANDED.
Notes
. These contingencies were typed and handwritten on the front of the purchase order. They are as follows:
1. Subject to Purchaser obtaining suitable financing.
2. Aircraft to be delivered to Purchaser free of squawks.
3. Aircraft to be delivered in Louisiana (no sales tax collected).
4. Price includes school for two pilots at Beech Factory.
5. Subject to Purchaser inspecting aircraft. If Purchaser does not accept aircraft, a charge of $1700.00 will be made for trip to Denver, however $50,000 will be refunded.
6. Aircraft to be delivered with fresh 100 hour.
7. Special “N” number to be installed by Seller.
. The manufacturer’s limited remedy provides: “[T]he entire extent of Manufacturer’s liability hereunder shall be limited to that of either repairing the defective part or providing a new replacement part, free of charge to the Buyer, in which event the part to be repaired or replaced shall be returned prepaid to the Manufacturer.”
. The “collateral” is described on the front of the form as a “Beech Aircraft Corp. B-100 King Air.” Other identifying information accompanies this description.
. The district court noted that “[t]here was considerable testimony as to the meaning which should be attached to that term.” The word “squawk” was coined by Lewis Carroll as a combination of “squall” and “squeak.” W. Morris & M. Morris, Morris Dictionary of Word and Phrase Origins 541 (1976). One book defines “squawks” as “malfunctions of the airplane that need to be reported to the maintenance crew after landing.” P. Eddy, E. Potter *1055 & B. Page, Destination Disaster 209 (1976); accord, Webster's Third New International Dictionary, s.v. “squawk sheet” (1966).
. These articles contain Louisiana’s warranty law. They “impose upon a seller the warranty that its goods are reasonably fit for the purposes intended by both parties to the sale.”
Jones v. Menard,
. The court’s ruling on HB’s motion reads as follows; “The motion of defendants, Beech Aircraft Corporation and Houston Beechcraft, Inc., is denied. A question of fact is presented as to whether there was a knowledgeable waiver of the warranties by the plaintiff in connection with the sale of the aircraft.”
.
Cf. West India Indus. v. Tradex,
. See note 25 and accompanying text infra.
. In its brief, DI agrees with the trial court’s finding, and says that “the April 6th document did not by its terms revoke or supercede [s/c] the March 30th sale agreement.” HB’s brief does not discuss this point.
.
Accord, Mississippi River Grain Elevator, Inc. v. Bartlett & Co., Grain,
.
See Wilkinson v. Manpower, Inc.,
. HB also relies on
Fine v. Property Damage Appraisers, Inc.,
. Section 186 of the Restatement (Second) provides: “Issues in contract are to be determined by the parties in accordance with the rule of § 187 .. ..” Section 187(1) of the Restatement (Second) provides: “The law of the state chosen by the parties to govern their contractual rights and duties will be applied if the particular issue is one which the parties could have resolved by explicit provision in their agreement directed to that issue.”
. See generally R. Leflar, American Conflicts Law § 145 (3d ed. 1977); R. Weintraub, Commentary on the Conflict of Laws § 7.3A (2d ed. 1980).
.
Lee
v.
Hunt,
.
Porter v. American Optical Corp.,
.
Accord, Lee v. Hunt,
. DI confuses its argument on this issue by discussing the specific waiver-of-warranty provisions, rather than the choice of law provision, in the April 6 agreement. These waiver-of-warranty provisions become relevant only after we have passed on the validity of the choice of law provision. If the choice of law provision is valid, then the effect of the waiver-of-warranty provisions must be considered in the light of Kansas law; and if the choice of law provision is invalid, then the effect of the waiver-of-warranty provisions must presumably be considered in the light of Louisiana law.
.
Accord, Fine v. Property Damage Appraisers, Inc.,
. “The burden of showing illegality is upon the party asserting it and it is not sufficient merely to create suspicion and suggest doubts as to its legality.”
United States v. Grace Evangelical Church,
.
Accord, Muschany v. United States,
. Prime objectives of contract law are to protect the justified expectations of the parties and to make it possible for them to foretell with accuracy what will be their rights and liabilities under the contract. These objectives may best be attained in multistate transactions by letting the parties choose the law to govern the validity of the contract and the rights created thereby.
Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws § 187 comment e (1969).
. One of DI’s witnesses, moreover, testified that DI had an agreement with another company, Pelican Aviation, to lease DI’s airplane to Pelican in return for revenues of about $50,000 per year. Although the district court found that DI had failed to prove that it would have derived revenues from this agreement, this testimony nevertheless reinforces the commercial character of the airplane sale.
.
Cf. K&C, Inc. v. Westinghouse Elec. Corp.,
. The record shows that Delhomme insisted on and won the inclusion in the contract of the seven conditions listed in note 1
supra.
Because these conditions are typed and written on the contract, they prevail over any conflicting clauses on the printed form contract. Dean v.
Pisciotta,
.
Fine v. Property Damage Appraisers, Inc.,
. In this respect, among others, this case differs from Associated Press v. Toledo Invs., Inc., ADR v. Graves, and United States Leasing Corp. v. Keiler, all discussed supra. In those cases, Louisiana public policy was used to protect the party who was being sued on a contract that contained an allegedly invalid choice of law provision.
.
Accord, ADR v. Graves,
.
See, e.g., Prince v. Paretti Pontiac Co.,
. 1 U.L.A. 1 (Supp.1981).
. The Kansas Consumer Protection Act, which we conclude does not apply to this sale. see p. 1060 infra, also deals with these subjects.
. See 1 U.L.A. 1 (Supp.1981).
. See R. Leflar, American Conflicts Law § 48, at 91-92 (3d ed. 1977) (“It is a rare case in which a claim validly existing under the laws of one American state can be said to be so far outside the pale of social, economic, and moral standards currently imposed by our civilization as to be violative of the strong public policy of any sister state.”).
.
Accord, Toledo Metro Fed. Credit Union v. Ted Papenhagen Oldsmobile, Inc.,
. The March 30 agreement also contains a waiver provision, which provides: “To the extent allowed by applicable law and effective immediately following the end of the 180 day period set forth above in [the “Manufacturer’s Limited Warranty”], Buyer waives as to Seller and Manufacturer all other warranties, whether of merchantability, fitness or otherwise.” This waiver, which was in effect subsumed by the waiver in the April 6 contract, is not at issue in this appeal.
. Kan.Stat.Ann. § 84-2-719(1) provides in pertinent part:
Subject to the provisions of subsections (2) and (3) of this section . . .
(a) the agreement may provide for remedies in addition to or in substitution for those provided in this article and may limit or alter the measure of damages recoverable under this article, as by limiting the buyer’s remedies to return of the goods and repayment of the price or to repair and replacement of nonconforming goods or parts; and
(b) resort to a remedy as provided is optional unless the remedy is expressly agreed to be exclusive, in which case it is the sole remedy.
. Kan.Stat.Ann. § 84-2-719(3) provides:
Consequential damages may be limited or excluded unless the limitation or exclusion is unconscionable. Limitation of consequential damages for injury to the person in the case of consumer goods is prima facie unconscionable but limitation of damages where the loss is commercial is not.
. One court also set forth these general considerations:
In determining whether the contract limitation fails of its essential purpose, the facts and circumstances surrounding the contract, the nature of the basic obligations of the party, the nature of the goods involved, the uniqueness or experimental nature of the items, the general availability of the items, and the good faith and reasonableness of the provision are factors which should be considered.
J. A. Jones Constr. Co. v. City of Dover,
