In Fеbruary 1976, Northeast Data, a Massachusetts firm, entered into a contract with Microdata, a California company. In the contract, Microdata promised Northeast, among other things, that:
1) Northeast would become the “sole distributor” for Microdаta’s “Reality” line of computer parts and related software in seven Massachusetts counties;
2) Microdata would properly service “Reality” products after Northeast Data sold them to end users;
3) Microdata would supply proper spare parts; and
4) Microdata would pay Northeast a 10% commission on any “Reality” products that Microdata sold directly to end users in Northeast’s territory.
The parties’ relationship subsequently deteriorated. And, in January 1983, Microdata, claiming that Northeast had failed to meet its contractual purchasing quota, terminated the distributorship.
Northeast then brought this diversity action (filed in state court then removed to federal court) against Microdata. In its original complaint Northeast essentially said that Microdata had broken its agreement (1) by failing to supply enough, or adequately trained, servicing personnel; (2) by failing to supply enough, or adequate, supply parts; (3) by failing to pay many 10% commissions when due; (4) by marketing what were essentially “Reality” products under different names, through other dealers; and (5) by charging Northeast highеr prices than it charged other dealers. Northeast later amended its complaint to add a “deceit” claim that Microdata had failed to disclose material information during contract negotiations, namely that Microdata was selling Rеality products, and would continue to sell them, to a company called ADP, which (according to Northeast) was both a “Reality” end user and a competing dealer. In Northeast’s view these actions and omissions broke both explicit and implicit terms of the contract, amounted to “fraud,” and violated various statutes, which, with the exception of Massachusetts’ “unfair trade practices” statute, are not relevant here. See Mass.Gen.L. ch. 93A.
The parties tried the contract and fraud issues to a jury, with the magistratе reserving the claim of violation of Chapter 93A. The jury found that Microdata had wrongfully terminated the distributorship; that it had broken explicit terms in the contract by failing to pay commissions on “end user” sales to ADP; and that it had broken an implicit covenant of “gоod faith and fair dealing" (either by failing to pay commissions on other sales, by failing to supply proper parts or service, or both). It awarded Northeast approximately $1.7 million damages. The jury also found that Microdata had fraudulently induced Northeast to enter the contract by failing to tell Northeast about its ADP sales; but the *609 jury refused to award any damages on that claim.
The magistrate then turned to the reserved Chapter 93A claim. He noted that Northeast and Microdata had agreed, while the case was pending, to try the contract and “fraud” claims under California law. He reasoned that the 93A claims so closely resembled the contract and fraud claims that the parties must have agreed “implicitly” to try those claims under California law as well. He concluded that, since California has no 93A-type of law, he must dismiss Northeast’s 93A claims. Northeast now appeals that dismissal. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291, 636(c)(3) (appeal from order of a magistrate judge).
For purposes of this appeal, we have assumed (without deciding) that Northeast is correct when it says that it neither explicitly nor implicitly agreed, during the course of this litigation, that California law would govern its 93A claims. Nonetheless, Northeast did agree, in the contract itself, that
This Agreement and the rights and obligations of the parties hereto shall be governed by and сonstrued in accordance with the laws of California.
In our view, Northeast’s Chapter 93A claims (with one exception) fall within this contractual choice-of-law provision.
Northeast describes its Chapter 93A claims and, most importantly, the alleged facts that underlie them in an 82 page document, filed with the magistrate, called “Plaintiff’s Request for Findings of Fact and Rulings of Law on Chapter 93A Damages.” Our review of the facts alleged in that document makes clear that (as we said, with one exception) Northеast’s 93A claims amount to embroidered “breach of contract” claims.
See Caton v. Leach Corp.,
Of course, the allegations that Microdata acted “willfully” оr “knowingly” or with a bad motive add something to the pure breach of contract claims. Indeed, Northeast hopes they provide the element of “rascality” needed to bring a claim of breach of contract within the statute.
Compare Pepsi-Cola Metropolitan Bottling Co., Inc. v. Checkers, Inc.,
The contract violations are essential elements of the 93A claims. The “state of mind” and “bad motive” allegations add little. Given the language of the contract’s choice-of-law provision (applying California law to “rights and obligations” arising out of, or imposed by, the “Agreement”), would it not seem surprising to find that Massachusetts law, not California law, gove *610 rned these claims? In the absence of any contrary evidence, we believe that, when рarties agree that “contract related” claims will be tried under, say, the law of California, they do not mean that a claim of “serious” or “rascal-like” breach of contract will be tried under the law of Massachusetts.
Moreover, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court has recognized that, under some circumstances, a Chapter 93A claim "is essentially duplicative of a traditional contract claim."
See Canal Electric Co. v. Westinghouse Electric Corp.,
We have found one district court case in Illinois that reaches a different result.
Fleet Mgt. Systems, Inc. v. Archer-Daniels-Midland Co., Inc.,
The Illinois case relied upon a Massachusetts district court case,
Computer Systems Engineering, Inc. v. Qantel Corp.,
We conclude that the parties, in their choice-of-law provision, meant that California law would govern both ordinary and "rascal-like" breach of contract claims. We believe that the "rascal-like" claims before us fit within that provisiоn. In the absence of a conflict with public policy, Massachusetts honors choice-of-law provisions in contracts,
Morris v. Watsco, Inc.,
We turn now to the one further 93A claim that we called an “exception.” That special claim rests upon allegations of fraud, not breach of contract. Northeast says that Microdata, when negotiating the contract, failed to disclose that it was currently selling Reality systems to ADP, a firm that does business in Northeast’s distributorship area, and that it intended to continue selling to ADP even aftеr the contract was in effect. Northeast says that this course of conduct amounts to a “fraud” that falls within the scope of Chapter 93A. Because this claim concerns the validity of the
formation
of the contract, it cannot be categorized as one involving the rights or obligations arising under the contract. Hence, the claim falls outside the contract’s choice-of-law provision.
See Qantel,
Nonetheless, Microdata, in its brief, refers us to the docket sheet, which notes that Northeast agreed, in a settlement, to stipulate that “none of” Microdata’s “actions w[ith] reference] t[o] ADP can form the basis of liability.” A district court memorandum confirms that, as part of the consent judgment, Northeast “agreed that if the Court of Appeals should reverse the judgment dismissing рlaintiff’s Chapter 93A claim (Count X of the Second Amended Complaint), plaintiff will not press as part of that claim any of the defendant’s actions with respect to ADP.” The appeal, with respect to this remaining ADP claim, therefore is moot.
See Pontarelli v. Stone,
Finally, we note that Northeast, in its 82 page document, at one point alleges in a single sentence that Microdata violated Chapter 93A by “filing and prosecuting frivolous and meritless counterclaims and аffirmative defenses, without any attempt to introduce any evidence to support same at the trial of this action.” Because Northeast does not separately press this claim on appeal, we suspect that it has been abandоned. But, if it has not, we simply point out that a claim of “abuse of process” with nothing more does not state a violation of Chapter 93A.
See Quaker State Oil Refining v. Garrity Oil Co.,
For these reasons, the magistrate’s order dismissing the Chapter 93A claims is
Affirmed.
