Norvergence sold telecommunications equipment and services — or claimed to do so. After three apparently flourishing years it collapsed.. The supposedly wondrous equipment it sold or rented, which it called a Merged Access Transport Intelligent Xchange (MATRIX) device, turned out to be a standard integrated-access box with none of the benefits that Norvergence had touted.
Our case is one of many filed by IFC Credit Corporation and other commercial factors that bought the right to payments under these contracts. When Norver-gence stopped providing telecom services, its customers stopped paying. (Some customers stopped paying even earlier, when savings did not materialize.) But IFC and similar entities claim to be holders in due course. If they have this status, then personal defenses that the customers could have asserted against Norvergence are unavailable, and the customers must pay IFC even though Norvergence told lies to make the sales.
We have held that the forum-selection clause that Norvergence included in contracts is valid and may be enforced by IFC (and similarly situated firms) unless the clause was the result of a distinct fraud.
IFC Credit Corp. v. Aliano Brothers General Contractors, Inc.,
Aliano Brothers
devoted a good deal of attention to the question whether state or federal law governs the validity of a forum-selection clause, when the forum being selected is a particular federal court. The decision in
Aliano Brothers
observed that federal courts have a substantial interest in agreements that purport to control where and when, within the federal system, litigation may occur. The same may be said about an agreement to a bench trial; Fed.R.Civ.P. 38 governs the choice between bench and jury trial once a suit has begun, raising the question whether federal law might apply to a pre-litigation agreement to waive a jury. But although
Aliano Brothers
left open the choice between state and federal law,
Abbott Laboratories v. Takeda Pharmaceutical Co.,
In a letter filed after oral argument, IFC argued for the first time that federal law controls the validity of the contract’s bench-trial clause. It relies on
Simler v. Conner,
Contracts for the sale or rental of equipment between merchants are governed by the Uniform Commercial Code, which Illinois has enacted. Terms in form contracts are routinely enforced under the UCC, unless a “battle of the forms” occurs (see § 2-207) or the term would be unconscionable (see § 2-302). (We cite the UCC’s provisions on sales; similar provisions in Article 2A cover leases.) There was only one form, Norvergence’s, so § 2-207 need not be consulted, and the Credit Union does not contend that a waiver of jury trial is unconscionable. Merchants often prefer professional adjudicators (be they judges or arbitrators) over amateurs.
What the district judge said is that the bench-trial clause is invalid because it was not the subject of negotiation (that is, it appears on a form), does not stand out (it is in the same type as other clauses), and was not reviewed by the Credit Union’s lawyer before the contract was signed (the Credit Union’s executives negotiated the deal without the participation of counsel). The UCC designates a few kinds of provisions as valid only if separately signed. See § 2-205 (firm-offer clause in form contract supplied by the buyer is valid only if separately signed by the seller); § 2-209 (clause limiting modification to a signed writing, in a contract between a merchant and a non-merchant, is valid only if separately signed by the non-merchant). But the UCC does not contain any separate-signing or separate-negotiation requirement for a clause agreeing to a bench trial, and the parties have not cited (and we did not find) any decision by a state court of Illinois creating such a requirement. Nor does the UCC make the validity of an agreement turn on review by a lawyer. The Credit Union had an opportunity to submit the document to counsel; it cannot use its own decision to bypass legal advice as a reason why it is not bound by what it signed.
Form agreements are common and enforceable. Lots of firms participate in the telecom-equipment business, and all a customer need do is say no to any given offer and let the competition continue. Norvergence wanted the customers’ money; to get it, Norvergence had to propose terms that the customers were willing to accept. Illinois does resolve ambiguities against firms that use form contracts (that rule is commonly invoked in insurance disputes), but it honors straightforward terms with understandable meanings. See, e.g.,
Nicor, Inc. v. Associated Electric & Gas Insurance Services, Ltd.,
Ever since
Carnival Cruise Lines, Inc. v. Shute,
There is no difference in principle between the content of a seller’s form contract and the content of that seller’s products. The judiciary does not monitor the content of the products, demanding that a telecom switch provide 50 circuits even though the seller promised (and delivered) 40 circuits. It does not matter that the seller’s offer was non-negotiable (if, say, it offered 40-circuit boxes and 100-circuit boxes, but nothing in between); just so with procedural clauses, such as jury waivers. As long as the price is negotiable and the customer may shop elsewhere, consumer protection comes from competition rather than judicial intervention. Making the institution of contract unreliable by trying to adjust matters
ex post
in favor of the weaker party will just make weaker parties worse off in the long run.
Original Great American Chocolate Chip Cookie Co. v. River Valley Cookies, Ltd.,
Two appellate decisions have held that agreements to resolve disputes by bench trials are enforceable only if extra evidence of negotiation or consent supports that clause. They rely on the fact that, in federal court, the seventh amendment gives the jury a constitutional status. See
National Equipment Rental, Ltd. v. Hendrix,
*994
Consider an agreement to arbitrate, which surrenders not only a jury trial but also the right to any judicial forum. Courts do not impose special negotiation requirements on arbitration clauses in form contracts. See, e.g.,
Oblix, Inc. v. Winiecki,
We have circulated this opinion to the full court under Circuit Rule 40(e), because it may create a conflict among the circuits. Although both Leasing Service and Telum hold bench-trial agreements valid as components of otherwise-valid contracts, they also state (inconsistently, it seems to us) that an agreement to resolve a dispute by a bench trial must be assessed by the standards of “waiver.” Moreover, National Equipment, K.M.C., Leasing Service, and Telum all approach the inquiry on the assumption (which the parties to those cases apparently did not contest) that federal law governs the validity of such a clause, even when state law applies to the substance of the parties’ dispute. None of the four decisions mentions or attempts to justify the disparate treatment of bench-trial and arbitration agreements, or the oddity of applying a waiver standard to a contract when Rule 38 does not use a waiver approach once the case gets to court. For the reasons we have given, we hold that state law governs the validity of a bench-trial agreement in a case under the diversity jurisdiction, and that the clause at issue here is enforceable under the UCC. None of the active judges favored a hearing en banc on this issue.
One final subject requires brief consideration. Just before the trial began, the Credit Union raised a defense of fraud in the factum, one of the “real defenses” that apply even to a holder in due course. This was the ground on which it prevailed before the jury. If a person signs a contract thinking it to be something else—say, a request for sales literature—then the pact is void. And a waiver-of-jury clause in a void contract would be void as well.
Things are not quite this simple, however. If the judge determines before trial that the contract is void, and that the jury waiver falls with it, then there is nothing to be tried to a jury. If the facts leave a material dispute requiring resolution by a trier of fact—here IFC maintains that the Credit Union knew full well exactly what it was signing, and that its defense of fraud in the factum is just a misnamed defense of fraud in the inducement—then the jury-waiver clause might be applied to determine whether a judge or a jury makes the critical decision.
In the law of arbitration,
Prima Paint Corp. v. Flood & Conklin Mfg. Co.,
We need not take sides in this conflict, for two reasons. First, the Credit Union has not argued that a judge must make a preliminary decision about a fraud-in-the-factum defense to determine whether the jury waiver is valid. This omission forfeits the argument. Second, whatever the best rule would be when a party says that it did not know the document it signed was a contract, that’s not the Credit Union’s position. It concedes knowledge that it was making a contractual commitment and argues only that it thought the contract one for communications services, as opposed to a combination of service and equipment. This means that the Credit Union knowingly assented to a contract containing a clause agreeing to a bench trial.
A judge, not a jury, must resolve the remaining disputes in this litigation. None of the other issues joined in the appellate briefs is likely to recur at a new trial, so no more need be said. The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded for a new trial.
