MEMORANDUM
In this diversity action, defendant, Display Data Corporation (“Display Data”), a Maryland corporation with its principal place of business in Maryland, moves to dismiss pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) the claims of plaintiffs, Jaskey Finance and Leasing (“Jaskey”) and Samrus Corporation (“Samrus”), both Pennsylvania corporations with their principal places of business in *162 Pennsylvania, for breach of express warranties, warranties of fitness and for negligent design of a computer system. For the reasons set forth in this memorandum, the Court will grant the defendant’s motion to dismiss the express warranty^ claims, the implied warranty of fitness claims, and the negligent design claim.
The subject of this suit is a 32K computer purchased by Jaskey and Samrus from Display Data in October, 1977. The parties entered into two contracts, one for the sale of the equipment, programming and installation services and another for maintenance of the computer system. Plaintiffs, who were dissatisfied with the operation of the computer, sued alleging that the computer and its component parts failed to operate properly, resulting in damages and the further economic loss of obtaining alternate computer time. In their lawsuit, plaintiffs allege that defendant’s conduct amounted to a breach of contract, a breach of express warranties, a breach of implied warranties, misrepresentation and negligence.
Two contracts are concerned: (a) an Equipment, Programming and Installation Services Contract, and (b) a Maintenance Contract. Each of these contracts is comprised of a single sheet of paper printed on both sides. The front side of the contracts contains blank spaces on which the name of the parties, the quantity, model number and the price of the goods were filled in. The bottom of the front side of the contracts states in bold type “Terms and Conditions on Reverse Side Are Part of This Contract.” Immediately under this phrase the signatures of the parties appear. The reverse side of the Equipment, Programming and Installation Services Contract is titled “Terms and Conditions” and contains six separately numbered and titled paragraphs. Two of the paragraphs are relevant to the present case. The first is paragraph 5 which is titled “Warranties” and within it is the following warranty and disclaimer:
(a) Seller warrants that it will provide maintenance service for Purchaser according to the terms and conditions of the separate maintenance contract executed by and between the parties.
(b) For a period of one (1) year after the program is delivered, Seller will make every reasonable effort to remedy or correct any errors in the program which are brought to the attention of the Seller.
(c) EXCEPT AS SPECIFICALLY PROVIDED HEREIN, THERE ARE NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, WHICH EXTEND BEYOND THE DESCRIPTION ON THE FACE OR REVERSE SIDE HEREOF.
(d) IN NO EVENT SHALL SELLER BE LIABLE TO PURCHASER FOR LOSS OF PROFITS OR OTHER ECONOMIC LOSS, INCLUDING SPECIAL, CONSEQUENTIAL OR OTHER SIMILAR DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF ANY CLAIMED BREACH BY SELLER OF ITS OBLIGATIONS THEREUNDER.
The other relevant provision in the Equipment, Programming and Installation Services Contract is under paragraph 6 which is entitled “Miscellaneous” and reads “This contract contains the entire agreement between the parties, and shall be binding upon both parties and their respective heirs, successors and/or assigns.” The Maintenance Contract in paragraph 7 contains a similar disclaimer clause which reads “EXCEPT AS SPECIFICALLY PROVIDED HEREIN, THERE ARE NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, WHICH EXTEND BEYOND THE DESCRIPTION CONTAINED HEREIN.” The contracts between the parties contain provisions that Maryland law governs the agreement. Since this is a diversity case, the Court must look to the choice of law rules of Pennsylvania, the forum, to decide what law is to be applied.
Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Electric Mfg. Co.,
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In evaluating the defendant’s motion to dismiss, the Court must construe the allegations in the complaint, along with the attached contracts, in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs.
See Rogin v. Bensalem Tp.,
As to the plaintiff’s express warranty claim, it is clear that the words employed in the disclaimer clause in the Equipment ..Contract, along with the integration clause, are sufficient to preclude express warranties. Plaintiff alleges that Display Data expressly warranted that the computer and programs which it was selling and leasing constituted a “turnkey” system that required plaintiff to perform only routine maintenance; was a system which was particularly suitable for use by an automobile dealership; was a system which was adaptable to businesses other than automobile dealerships and was a system in which all errors and malfunctions would be eliminated within a specified time period thereby resulting in an error-free system. The written contractual agreements described previously do not contain any of these alleged express warranties. The Equipment Contract warrants that the seller will provide maintenance service for the purchaser subject to the terms in the Maintenance Contract and that for a period of one year after the program is delivered, seller will make every reasonable effort to correct any errors in the program. These are the only express warranties that are created by the contracts. Moreover, the contracts expressly exclude any other express warranties. Paragraph 5(c) of the Equipment Contract reads “EXCEPT AS SPECIFICALLY PROVIDED HEREIN, THERE ARE NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, WHICH EXTEND BEYOND THE DESCRIPTION ON THE FACE OR THE REVERSE SIDE HEREOF.” Paragraph 7 of the Maintenance Contract contains almost identical language. Although the parties have not brought to the Court’s attention any Maryland cases which are dispositive of the express warranty issue, Maryland has adopted the Uniform Commercial Code and cases in other states applying the Uniform Commercial Code are almost unanimous in holding that provisions disclaiming express warranties by the use of language similar to that in this case are effective disclaimers of express warranties. See
S.M. Wilson & Co. v. Smith International, Inc.,
It is true, as. plaintiff contends, that Maryland’s Commercial Code does not require that express warranties be made part of the written agreement but rather provides that “[a]ny affirmation of fact or promise made by the seller to the buyer which relates to the goods and becomes part of the basis of the bargain creates an express warranty that the goods shall conform *164 to the affirmation of promise.” Md. [Com. Law] Code Ann. § 2-313(l)(a). Plaintiff in its brief states that the express warranties alleged were contained in advertising or promotional material that was received by the plaintiff. However, the plaintiff ignores the effect of the parol evidence rule on this transaction. Under Maryland’s Commercial Code if the parties intended the written contract to be a “final” expression of their agreement, then it may not be contradicted by evidence of any prior agreement or contemporaneous oral agreement, and if the parties intended the contract to be the “complete and exclusive” statement of their agreement, it may not be supplemented even by non-contradictory terms. Md. [Com.Law] Code Ann. § 2-316(1), 2-202.
The Equipment Contract contains an integration provision which reads in relevant part, “[t]his contract contains the entire agreement between the parties.” Thus, the contract plainly states that it constitutes the entire understanding between the parties. Courts applying the Uniform Commercial Code’s provisions to similar integration provisions have found that such language is sufficient to render the contract the final and exclusive agreement of the parties, thereby preventing the introduction of parol evidence to vary the contract’s terms.
See, e.g., Earman Oil Co.
v.
Burroughs Corp.,
The same result must be reached on the issue of implied warranties of fitness for a particular use, since such warranties have been expressly and adequately disclaimed. According to the statute, “[l]anguage 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.’ ” Md. [Com.Law] Code Ann. § 2-316(2). Since the disclaimer of the implied warranty of fitness in the present contracts is in writing as required by the Code, the primary issue remaining to be addressed is whether the disclaimer of the implied warranty of fitness is conspicuous. A clause is conspicuous when it is “so written that a reasonable person against whom it is to operate ought to have noticed it.” Md. [Com.Law] Code Ann. § 1-201(10). A sentence in the body of the contract is “conspicuous” if it is “in larger or other contrasting type or color.” Md. [Com.Law] Code Ann. § 1-201(10). The decision as to whether a term is conspicuous is to be made by the Court. Md. [Com.Law] Code Ann. § 1-201(10).
The disclaimers in the present case are printed in larger type and in contrasting type, thereby satisfying either prong of the “conspicuous” requirement. A Maryland court has found a disclaimer conspicuous where the disclaimer language was separately underscored and a heading in capital letters demarcated the section.
Houck v. DeBonis,
The Court has concluded that the disclaimers of the implied warranty of fitness in the contracts at issue here are conspicuous and are not rendered inconspicuous by their location on the reverse side of the contracts. In both the Equipment and the Maintenance Contracts, there is a reference in bold-faced capital letters to the terms and conditions of the contracts on the reverse side of the documents, located just above the signatures on the front side of the contracts. This reference to the reverse side of the contracts provided the plaintiffs with sufficient notice that the terms on the reverse side of the contracts were part of the agreement.
See Houck,
The defendant also moves to dismiss the fourth count in the complaint which alleges that the computer equipment and programs were negligently designed because they were insufficient to perform their contemplated tasks. In this count, the plaintiffs sought damages for the loss of value of the computer system and the attendant replacement costs resulting from this negligence. The defendant contends that the gravamen of Jaskey’s action is a claim for breach of contract or breach of warranty, not a tort claim. It appears that the plaintiffs have dropped their negligent design claim because they did not contest or oppose defendant’s motion to dismiss that claim. Even assuming that the plaintiffs have not abandoned their negligent design claim, the Court has determined that this claim must be dismissed pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6).
Since there does not appear to be authoritative Maryland precedent on this issue, the
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Court must predict how the state’s Supreme Court would rule.
See Barris v. Bob’s Drag Chutes & Equipment Inc.,
In Count IV of its complaint, Jaskey alleges that the computer system was “insufficient” to perform its function in accordance with Jaskey and Display Data’s expectations. The plaintiffs do not allege that an unreasonably hazardous condition in the equipment caused physical harm to property or to a person, or physically damaged the equipment itself. The only claims of damage for the unsuitable computer system were for loss of value of the computer system and the accompanying replacement costs. Because Jaskey’s claim in Count IV is solely for economic loss and not for physical harm to a person or property, the claim is actually in contract. As a result, Count IV which contains the plaintiffs’ negligence claim will be dismissed pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
