MCI WORLDCOM NETWORK SERVICES, INC., Appellant,
v.
MASTEC, INC., Appellee.
Supreme Court of Florida.
*222 James J. Proszek and Anthony J. Jorgenson of Hall, Estill, Hardwick, Gable, Golden, and Nelson, P.C., Tulsa, Oklahoma, for Appellant.
Alan J. Kluger and Steve I. Silverman of Kluger, Peretz, Kaplan and Berlin, P.L., Miami, Florida, for Appellee.
David P. Ackerman and Michael A. Weeks of Ackerman, Link and Sartory, P.A., West Palm Beach, Florida, on behalf of Sprint Corporation, Southwestern Bell Telephone, L.P., and Broadwing Communications, LLC; and Caryn Lynn Bellus of Kubicki Draper, P.A., Miami, Florida, on behalf of Lewis E. Krantz d/b/a Treasure Coast Directional Drilling and Michael A. Lind d/b/a Pipeline Directional Services, Inc., as Amici Curiae.
PER CURIAM.
We have for review the following two questions concerning Florida law certified by the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit that are determinative of a cause pending in that court and for which there appears to be no controlling precedent:
IS A TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES CARRIER ENTITLED TO DAMAGES FOR THE LOSS OF USE OF A FIBER-OPTIC CABLE DAMAGED BY A DEFENDANT WHEN THE CARRIER INTENDED TO HAVE THE FULL CAPACITY OF THE DAMAGED CABLE AVAILABLE FOR ITS USE SHOULD THE NEED HAVE ARISEN, BUT THE CARRIER WAS ABLE TO ACCOMMODATE WITHIN ITS OWN NETWORK THE TELECOMMUNICATIONS TRAFFIC CARRIED BY THE DAMAGED CABLE AND THE CARRIER PRESENTED NO EVIDENCE THAT IT SUFFERED LOSS OF REVENUE OR OTHER DAMAGES DURING THE TIME THE CABLE WAS UNAVAILABLE?
IF THE TELECOMMUNICATIONS CARRIER IS ENTITLED TO LOSS OF USE DAMAGES, DOES THE PRE-INJURY VALUE OF THE DAMAGED CABLE ESTABLISH A LIMIT TO THOSE DAMAGES, OR SHOULD THE FAIR MARKET RENTAL VALUE OF AN EQUIVALENT REPLACEMENT CABLE FOR THE TIME REASONABLY NECESSARY TO MAKE REPAIRS SERVE AS THE MEASURE OF LOSS OF USE DAMAGES?
MCI WorldCom Network Servs., Inc., v. Mastec, Inc.,
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Mastec, an excavation company, inadvertently severed one of MCI's underground fiber-optic cables in downtown Miami, and the cable was not repaired until ninety-seven hours later. However, MCI did not suffer a disruption of its service because it was able to redirect the telecommunications traffic from the damaged cable to other cables in its system. As a result, MCI avoided any loss of profits. MCI claimed compensatory damages in the amount of $23,000 for the cost of repairs, loss-of-use damages in the amount of $868,000, and punitive damages. The loss-of-use damages claim was based upon the amount that MCI claims it could have paid, but did not, to rent the use of an equivalent substitute cable from another *223 telecommunications company for the time reasonably necessary to make repairs. The district court found against MCI on its loss of use damages claim. The Eleventh Circuit found that this case raised unsettled questions of Florida tort law and certified the two questions presented.
DISCUSSION
The issue here is whether MCI is entitled to loss of use damages measured by the cost of renting replacement cable for its fiber-optic cable which was damaged by Mastec during the excavation. Therefore, we have reworded the certified questions as follows:
IS A TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES CARRIER ENTITLED TO LOSS OF USE DAMAGES MEASURED BY THE COST OF RENTING A REPLACEMENT FOR A FIBER-OPTIC CABLE DAMAGED BY A DEFENDANT WHEN THE CARRIER WAS ABLE TO ACCOMMODATE WITHIN ITS OWN NETWORK THE TELECOMMUNICATIONS TRAFFIC CARRIED BY THE DAMAGED CABLE AND THE CARRIER PRESENTED NO EVIDENCE THAT IT RENTED REPLACEMENT CABLE OR SUFFERED ANY LOSS OF REVENUE OR OTHER DAMAGES DURING THE TIME THE CABLE WAS UNAVAILABLE?
Because MCI was able to reroute the telecommunications traffic carried on its damaged cable so that there was neither an interruption of service nor any actual lost profits suffered, Mastec argues that MCI should not be awarded loss-of-use damages. Mastec asserts that the purpose of compensatory damages would be frustrated if loss-of-use damages were awarded in the instant case because Mastec would essentially be punished for damaging MCI's fiber-optic cable while MCI received a windfall. MCI, on the other hand, argues it should not be punished for having the foresight to install this backup system at a considerable cost to itself. Therefore, MCI argues that it is entitled to the loss-of-use damages claimed, that is, the cost of renting a replacement cable. We essentially agree with Mastec and hold that under these circumstances MCI is not entitled to loss-of-use damages measured by the cost of renting replacement cable.
Generally, a person or entity injured by either a breach of contract or by a wrongful or negligent act or omission of another is entitled to recover a fair and just compensation that is commensurate with the resulting injury or damage. See Winn & Lovett Grocery Co. v. Archer,
Moreover, loss-of-use damages can be an element of compensatory damages when the damage is to personal property and the damage amounts to less than total destruction of the property. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 928 (1979). *224 However, "the purpose of compensatory damages is to compensate, not to punish defendants or bestow a windfall on plaintiffs." Cooperative Leasing, Inc. v. Johnson,
The fundamental principle of the law of damages is that the person injured by breach of contract or by wrongful or negligent act or omission shall have fair and just compensation commensurate with the loss sustained in consequence of the defendants act which give[s] rise to the action. In other words, the damages awarded should be equal to and precisely commensurate with the injury sustained.
Hanna v. Martin,
A number of courts have addressed the issue of loss-of-use damages and the cost of rental of a replacement in the context of the telecommunications industry under circumstances similar to those present here. The majority of these cases have found the telecommunication carrier was not entitled to loss-of-use damages based on the cost to rent a replacement cable where there has been no rental and there has been no interruption of service. In Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. Harris Co.,
Likewise, in MCI Worldcom Network Services, Inc. v. Lind, No. 00-4407-CIV-JORDAN,
An award of loss of use damages based on rental value for over $200,000 would be a windfall to MCI because it suffered no actual loss due to its ability to instantaneously reroute traffic to other cables in its system....
... In the prior order, I merely indicated that allowing MCI to recover over $ 200,000 in loss of use damages for a cable with a value significantly less than that would be contrary to Florida law. *225 This was not meant to be a limitation on MCI's compensatory damages. If a liability is established, MCI can still recover all permissible damages relating to the repair of the damaged cable.
Id.,
The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals in MCI Worldcom Network Services, Inc. v. OSP Consultants, Inc.,
Is a telecommunications services carrier entitled to damages for the loss of use of a fiber-optic cable damaged by a defendant when the carrier intended to have the full capacity of the damaged cable available for its use should the need have arisen, but the carrier was able to accommodate within its own network the telecommunications traffic carried by the damaged cable and the carrier presented no evidence that it suffered loss of revenue or other damages during the time that the cable was unavailable?[1]
Id.
The Supreme Court of Virginia answered this question in the negative, and the Fourth Circuit affirmed the district court's decision that MCI was not entitled to loss-of-use damages under Virginia law. Id. In answering the certified question in the negative, the Supreme Court of Virginia stated:
We do not agree with MWNS's [MCI WorldCom Network Services] contention [that the extra capacity that it built into its fiber-optic network that allowed it to accommodate the traffic carried by the damaged cable is the functional equivalent of the spare boat used in The Cayuga,5 F. Cas. 326 (E.D.N.Y.1868), aff'd,5 F. Cas. 329 (C.C.E.D.N.Y.1870), aff'd,81 U.S. (14 Wall.) 270 ,20 L.Ed. 828 (1871)]. In the present case, the evidence shows that MWNS maintains excess network capacity primarily for the general use of its business so that it can accommodate varying levels of telecommunications traffic. While it is true that the excess capacity enables MWNS to reroute traffic in the event of emergencies, MWNS does not reserve particular cables for use exclusively in emergencies, as in the "spare boat" cases. Accordingly, consistent with the holding in Brooklyn Terminal, we hold that, in the circumstances of this case, MWNS is not entitled to loss-of-use damages, and we answer the certified question in the negative.
MCI WorldCom Network Services, Inc. v. OSP Consultants, Inc.,
*226 In MCI Worldcom Network Services, Inc. v. Morris Plumbing & Electric Co., No. 00-4250-CIV-GARBER,
Among the damages sought by MCI were loss-of-use damages which MCI alleged it had sustained because it was unable to use its backbone cables while they were being repaired. Id.,
More recently, in MCI Worldcom Network Services, Inc. v. W.M. Brode Co.,
This Court finds the rulings of the U.S. District Court of the Eastern District of Virginia, Supreme Court of Virginia, the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals, and U.S. District Court of the Southern District of Florida compelling and decisive. MCI may not charge the expenses saved MCI by its ingenious redundant network to Brode as if the expenses had never been saved. MCI had the foresight and good business acumen to implement a system that allowed for uninterrupted network service in the event of damage to a particular segment of cable. As a result MCI presumably gained a competitive advantage, enhanced customer service and forestalled expenses it may have incurred but for the redundancy capability of its network. As in Brooklyn Terminal, [287 U.S. 170 ,53 S.Ct. 103 ,77 L.Ed. 240 (1932),] this redundancy was used in the ordinary course of business and was not reserved expressly for emergencies. Therefore, the Court finds that loss-of-use damages are inappropriate and grants Defendant[']s motion for partial summary judgment as MCI may not recover loss of use damages when no actual [] loss of service occurred.
While the majority of cases hold that a telecommunications company like MCI would not be entitled to loss-of-use damages based on loss of revenues when there has been no interruption of service, there have been a few decisions which have reached the opposite conclusion both in situations where there has been an interruption of service and in those with no interruption of service. For example, in MCI WorldCom Network Services, Inc. v. Kramer Tree Specialists Inc., No. 02 C 7150,
Similarly, in MCI Worldcom Network Services, Inc. v. Glendale Excavation *228 Corp.,
While it is certainly too early in the process to be discussing the issue of damages, it is clear that MCI will most likely be entitled to loss of use damages. However, it is equally clear that the rental value of a substitute cable may not be an appropriate measure of those damages, as MCI would prefer....
....
... There is no question in this case that MCI lost, for a period of time, the right to use its cable. Therefore, loss of use is most likely an appropriate component, in addition to repair costs, of any measure of damages for the severing of the underground cable. MCI's cable was disabled and was unusable for a period of time, theoretically leading to more than just repair costs for the company.
Unlike other jurisdictions, however, New Jersey does not use replacement rental value as the only measure of loss of use damages. In New Jersey other factors, including whether the injured party actually rented a substitute, are used in determining the level of loss of use damages. Camaraza [v. Bellavia Buick Corp.,216 N.J.Super. 263 ,523 A.2d 669 , 672 (1987)]. It would be grossly unfair to require Glendale to pay to MCI almost $2,000,000 in damages should it be determined that MCI's actual losses were not very high due to MCI's ability to reroute its lost calls to other parts of its network.
Id. at 880-81.[4]
In a case from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida, AT & T Corp. v. Lanzo Construction Co.,
However, in several other cases courts have discussed the Lanzo decision and declined to adopt its reasoning. For example, in MCI Worldcom Network Services v. Lind, No.00-4407-CIV-JORDAN, 2003 U.S. Dist. Lexis 10758 (S.D.Fla. Feb. 27, 2003), in an order denying MCI's motion for reconsideration, the court reaffirmed its ruling that MCI was not entitled to summary judgment on the issue of loss-of-use damages. In so doing, the court disagreed *229 with the reasoning in Lanzo, which was based on the damaged cable being the relevant property for loss-of-use purposes. Instead, the district court relied on the reasoning in MCI Worldcom v. Morris Plumbing in determining that the relevant property could be the entire telecommunication system as opposed to the damaged cable. Lind,
In vacating a prior order which had declared the relevant property to be the damaged cable, the court in Morris said:
In support of the February 28, 2002, Omnibus Order, this Court relied on AT&T Corp. v. Lanzo Constr. Co., Fla.,74 F.Supp.2d 1223 (S.D.Fla.1999). Defendants contend that there is no evidence that the telecommunications system that MCI employed is similar enough to the system that AT & T utilized in Lanzo to warrant adoption of the Lanzo Court's conclusion that the chattel "consisted of a single fiberoptic cable."74 F.Supp.2d at 1225 . The Court agrees, and therefore will re-consider its decision.
Even the evidence that MCI submitted appears to support the conclusion that the MCI backbone and redundant fiber-optic cables were set up to operate as one integrated unit which would automatically remain operable, i.e. automatically re-route traffic to the redundant cable, in the event of a severance. See [affidavit submitted by MCI] ("the initial phase of traffic re-routing is designed to occur automatically and nearly instantaneously"). Nothing in the Lanzo opinion suggests that AT & T had a similar system.
Morris,
However, in this telecommunication services case, MCI has not demonstrated that it is possible to determine the flow of calls to a particular cable in a system of cables where there has been no loss of service and thus no loss of revenue. Because MCI did not actually suffer the loss of use of its telecommunications service, damages for loss of use measured by the rental replacement value would result in a windfall to MCI. Any damages to MCI based on rental replacement are purely theoretical. Consequently, we find persuasive the majority of cases which deny loss-of-use damages for rental of replacement cable when there has been no rental because they further the goal of awarding damages in an amount equal to the loss sustained. See, e.g., MCI Worldcom Network Services, Inc. v. OSP Consultants, Inc.,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we answer the reworded certified question in the negative and hold that loss-of-use damages based on rental replacement value is not the appropriate measure of damages when there have been no such damages incurred *230 and the telecommunications traffic carried by the damaged cable has been accommodated within the telecommunications carrier's own network so there has been no loss of service. We return this case to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit for further proceedings.
It is so ordered.
QUINCE, C.J., and ANSTEAD, PARIENTE, CANTERO, and BELL, JJ., concur.
LEWIS, J., concurs in result only with an opinion.
WELLS, J., recused.
LEWIS, J., concurring in result only.
I dissent with regard to the majority's approach which combines and blends the two distinct issues identified and certified to us by the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit. Instead of blending the two certified questions, which only confuses the distinct issues presented in this case, we should respond to the specific questions as certified. I also dissent with regard to the majority's reasoning in response to the combined issue as rephrased because the majority incorrectly concludescontrary to well-established Florida lawthat evidence of lost profits or revenue has now become part of the analysis, and is apparently required as a predicate for loss-of-use damages for the personal property at issue here. The majority reaches this result without reliance on a single Florida case.
I would answer the first certified question in the affirmative and hold that loss-of-use damages are, and always have been, recoverable under Florida law for injury to personal property. I find no basis to exclude fiber-optic cable from this category, and Florida law has never required evidence of loss of revenue, loss of profits, or other similar injury as a condition precedent to such recovery. I would provide a qualified response to the second certified question that, generally, the measure of loss is limited to the pre-injury value of cable or the fair-market rental value of a cablenot the rental value of an entire system or network of cable, unless the damage to the single-item cable location caused the entire system or network to become inoperable.
Individual Cable as Personal Property
As we resolve these legal issues, we should first squarely address whether we are including an individual fiber-optic cable, as a component of a larger telecommunications system and network, in the same category as other personal property subject to general Florida loss-of-use property damage law. This general loss-of-use damage law applies when personal property is damaged but not totally destroyed. One might imply from the majority opinion that the Court has now excluded a damaged individual cable that is part of a larger network from existing loss-of-use damage law. However, there is no express statement in the majority opinion that such property is excluded from the general category in which all other forms of personal property are considered in Florida, nor is there any reason provided for this exclusion. The majority diverges off into a tangential discussion of proof of loss, revenue, and profits, which are not, in my view, controlling in consideration and application of the general rule of law in Florida with regard to damage to personal property and loss-of-use damages. The majority has created at least an impression or appearance that the elements for evaluation or the measurement of loss-of-use damages are now somehow different in this particular case without addressing or applying the available, relevant, and controlling Florida law in this area.
*231 I would not exclude cable from the general category of personal property to which general Florida loss-of-use damages law applies. I see no distinction with any significant difference between an individual cable and other types of personal property, and neither party nor the majority provides any sound distinction or test to separate any particular personal property into a distinct, singular category to which general Florida law on this issue does not apply. In my view, there are various and multiple types of personal property that are singular or individual in nature, but may become integrated into or within a system or network of service, that do not and should not receive different treatment (e.g., a single bolt within a larger network system, a motor-vehicle taxi within a taxi-transport system, an individual aircraft integrated into an airline-transport system, an individual computer integrated into a larger technology system, etc.). These individual components should not receive different treatment than other types of personal property. Damage to individual and singular items of personal property should receive consistent treatment under Florida law with regard to the general issue of loss-of-use damages (and this has been the case until today)even if the personal property is connected within a larger system or network. The Eleventh Circuit recognized the necessity of resolving this initial issue when it certified the first independent question.
Assessment of Loss-of-Use Damages
Next, we proceed to the truly controlling issue in this case, which the Eleventh Circuit presented in the second certified question. The Court of Appeals essentially posed the key question as how loss-of-use damages are to be measured. The Restatement (Second) of Torts, which the majority correctly recognizes as governing actions that involve loss of use damages in Florida, states:
When one is entitled to a judgment for harm to chattels not amounting to a total destruction in value, the damages include compensation for
....
(b) the loss of use.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 928 (1979) (emphasis supplied); see also majority op. at 223. We recognized the validity of the above-quoted Restatement (Second) provision when we approved an amended standard jury instruction that included an instruction for loss of use in cases involving damage to personal property. See Standard Jury Instructions (Civil Cases),
I find no support in Florida jurisprudence for the proposition that an owner of damaged personal property must demonstrate that the damage has resulted in an actual loss of profits or revenue as a condition precedent to recovery of loss-of-use damages. Rather, Florida precedent time and again has held, consistent with the Restatement (Second), that recovery for the loss of use of an item of personal property is proper when it is demonstrated that the personal property has been harmed by the conduct of another but has not been totally destroyed. This is a completely separate issue from whether loss of profits or revenue has been or can be established. See AT&T Corp. v. Lanzo Constr. Co.,
Although damage to the personal property of anothera fiber-optic cable in the instant mattercarries loss-of-use damages, it may not serve as the basis for a claim of loss of capacity or loss of use of the entire system. Thus, while the majority may ultimately arrive with the correct result this case, the supporting legal analysis is, in my view, severely flawed, misdirected, and contrary to longstanding Florida law. This case should be resolved within, and the majority should address, the measure or extent of the loss-of-use damages, and not by eliminating that category of damages from Florida law.
NOTES
Notes
[1] This is one of the same questions the Eleventh Circuit has certified to this Court.
[2] The "spare boat" cases referred to by the Supreme Court of Virginia are such as The Cayuga,
In Brooklyn Eastern District Terminal v. United States,
[3] It must be noted that in the case before us MCI did not have a similar disruption of service.
[4] It must be noted that there is no mention in the opinion of whether MCI suffered a disruption in its telecommunications service. The opinion merely states that MCI's cable was damaged and unusable.
