ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO REMAND AND GRANTING DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS COUNTS III-VI
This аction, initially filed in Waukesha County Circuit Court for the State of Wisconsin, involves a commercial dispute between the plaintiff, Ice Bowl L.L.C. (“Ice Bowl”), a Wisconsin company in the business of sports marketing, and Weigel Broadcasting Co. (“Weigel”), an Illinois corporation which owns WDJT-TV, a CBS affiliate in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Presently before the court is Ice Bowl’s motion to remand this action to Waukesha County Circuit Court for the State of Wisconsin and Weigel’s motion to dismiss all of the tort claims, counts III through VI, in the complaint. Ice Bowl’s motion to remand shall be denied because the relief requested would not sаtisfy the contractual forum selection clause on which the' motion is based. Weigel’s motion to dismiss the tort claims, counts III-VI, shall be granted because those claims are barred by Wisconsin’s economic loss doctrine.
I. FACTS
This suit arises from an alleged agreement between the parties, whereby Ice Bowl would make available a local sports celebrity for Weigel’s use in creating six television programs and related materials. In return, Weigel allegedly promised payment of certain sums to both Ice Bowl and the celebrity. Further, Weigel allegedly committed itself to providing Ice Bowl broadcasting air-time on Milwaukee’s WDJT-TV, other Wisconsin stations on which the same programming is carried, and on Weigel’s Chicago-area television station.
Allegedly, despite lee Bowl’s performance, Weigel has failed to meet its obligations to provide Ice Bowl with the promised air-time or its cash equivalent. The complaint further alleges that Weigel engaged in a “course and pattern of wrongful activity ... including but not limited to” concealing Weigel’s failure to perform. (CompU 7.) The complaint frames these facts in seven counts: I — Breach of Contract; II — Quantum Meru-it; III — Intentional Misrepresentation; IV— Strict Responsibility Misrepresentation; V— Negligent Misrepresentation; VI — Fraud in the Inducement; and VII — For an Accounting and Constructive Trust.
Ice Bowl filed this complaint in Wisconsin’s Waukesha County Circuit Court on March 24, 1998. Weigel removed the action to this court on April 14, 1998. On that same day, Weigel filed a mоtion, to dismiss the tort claims, counts III-VI, as barred by the economic loss doctrine. Ice Bowl both responded to this motion and filed a motion to remand the case to Waukesha County Circuit Court. The basis of this latter motion is a forum selection provision in the parties’ contract.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Forum Selection and Ice Bawl’s Motion to Remand
Section VIII-A of thе parties’ contract provides: “Jurisdiction and venue for litigation of any disputes shall be in Milwaukee County Circuit Court.” Nonetheless, Ice Bowl filed this suit in, and seeks to remand it to, Waukesha County Circuit Court. In support of this motion, lee Bowl argues that the provision is merely a bar to federal court; that is, that “Milwаukee County Circuit Court” means any Wisconsin state court. For its part, Weigel argues that the provision is permissive rather than mandatory; that is, that “shah” means “may.”
Rather than follow the parties through the looking glass, the court finds the provision clear on its face and that Ice Bowl waived its benefit by filing in the wrong court. Allowing remand would continue a game of jurisdictional hopscotch that serves no one. However, the court will deny the *1082 motion to remand for a simpler reason: granting the motion would do nothing in the way of enforcing the forum selection clause. Waukesha County Circuit Court is no more within the clause than is this court.
B. Motion to Dismiss
1. Standards for a Motion to Dismiss
This court will grant a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim if it is clear that the plaintiff would not be entitled to relief even if the complaint’s factual allegations were proven.
Conley v. Gibson,
2. The Economic Loss Doctrine and Ice Bowl’s Tort Claims
The tort theories advanced in this case by Ice Bowl' — intentional, strict liability, and negligent misrepresentation, and fraud in the inducement — add no facts to the contract claims but merely invoke new adjectives. There is but a single dispute in this case, and it is one sounding in contract. Weigel’s motion to dismiss counts III-VI will be granted.
In this diversity case, we turn to Wisconsin law, bоth under
Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins,
Ice Bowl concedes that the economic loss doctrine applies to contracts for sеrvices as well as for goods.
See generally Stoughton Trailers, Inc. v. Henkel Corp.,
However, Ice Bowl claims that an exception to the economic loss doctrine exists for tortious misrepresentation claims. While Wisconsin courts have not spoken directly to this point, the Seventh Circuit has already predicted that Wisconsin would not exceрt negligence and strict liability misrepresentation claims from the economic loss doctrine.
Cooper Power Sys., Inc. v. Union Carbide Chemicals and Plastics Co.,
Ice Bowl takes the risky tack of arguing that
Cooper Power
was wrongly decided by the Seventh Circuit. Specifically, Ice Bowl points to the three policy foundations of the economic loss doctrine as recently rearticu-lated by the Wisconsin Supreme Court in
Daanen & Janssen:
maintaining the distinction between tort and contract law, protecting commercial parties’ freedom to allocate risk by contract, and encouraging the purchaser — the pаrty best suited to assess the risk — to assume, allocate, and/or insure against that risk.
Ice Bowl zeros in on the second policy which upholds the freedom of commercial parties to allocate risk by contract. Specifically, Ice Bowl claims that this function is torn asunder when a party еngages in misrepresentation.
Daanen & Janssen’s
explication of the risk-allocation policy, however, is hardly a new concept in economic loss doctrine.
See, e.g., D’Huyvetter v. A.O.
*1083
Smith Harvestore Prods.,
Nonetheless, not every conceivable tort is precluded by the economic loss doctrine.
See Raytheon Co. v. McGraw-Edison Co.,
This observation flows from the fact that the distinction that the economic loss doctrine maintains between tort and contract serves the divergent purposes of each body of law. While “[ejontract law rests on obligations imposed by bargain ... [t]ort law is rooted in the concept of protecting society as a whole_”
Daanen & Janssen,
Tort law provides a contrast insofar as it is premised on a duty of care independent of private agreements. Examples help define the parameters of tort law. In Wisconsin, а seller of real estate owes certain duties of disclosure to a non-commercial purchaser, the breach of which is actionable in tort.
Ollerman v. O’Rourke,
The economic loss doctrine holds that tort law does not provide this same generalized protection in the context of transactions between two commercial partiеs.
See Badger Pharmacol v. Colgate-Palmolive Co.,
This is the path Wisconsin has taken. Because commercial contracts do not usually directly implicate “the concept of protecting society as a whole,”
Daanen & Janssen,
Because of the linguistic flexibility possible under the label “fraudulent inducement,” the court must “look not at the label placed on the claim by the attorney, but rather on the substance of the claim.”
Raytheon,
Adding an allegation of a culpable mеntal state to a “breach of commercial contract” claim does not avoid the doctrine. When parties allocate risk contractually through warranty and other provisions, these provisions do not generally turn on a party’s mental state. That is, when a buyer extracts a warrаnty from a seller who represents that a thing is a thing, if, in the end, the thing is not a thing, the warranty protects the buyer without regard to the seller’s mental state. Therefore, the party complaining of breach does not need tort law to protect itself. It is, thus, folly to claim that the breach of contract, accompanied by some putatively culpable mental state, becomes a tort. Nonperformance by any other name is still nonperformance.
In sum, our law places great importance on the ability of commercial parties to freely ply their trade. This principlе may be qualified when commerce implicates public interest. In the vast majority of instances, when called upon to adjudicate a dispute between two commercial entities, a court must merely enforce, insofar as possible, the bargain between the parties. To ignore the contract, or write into it unexpected provisions based on the law of tort, would undo the predictability and freedom to bargain that lies at the heart of contract.
See Cooper Power,
III. CONCLUSION
The plaintiff Ice Bowl L.L.C.’s motion to remand this case to Waukesha County Circuit Court for the State of Wisconsin is DENIED.
The defendant Wеigel Broadcasting Co.’s motion to dismiss counts III-VI of the complaint is GRANTED.
Notes
. “Insurance holds an important place in our industrial society. Insurance is recognized by the insured, the victim, the legislature and the public as a system for compensating the third-party victim for injuries caused by another.”
Kranzush v. Badger State Mut. Cas. Co.,
. Noteworthy is that the tort of "bad-faith,” in the context of insurance, is distinct from a claim in contract for breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing that attends all contracts.
See Market Street,
