PEERLESS NETWORK, INC., et al., Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. MCI COMMUNICATIONS SERVICES, INC., VERIZON SERVICES CORP., and VERIZON SELECT SERVICES, INC., Defendants-Appellants.
No. 18-2747
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
Argued January 14, 2019 — Decided February 20, 2019
Before WOOD, Chief Judge, and BRENNAN and ST. EVE, Circuit Judges.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 1:14-cv-07417 — Thomas M. Durkin, Judge.
ST. EVE,
I. Background
Local Exchange Carriers (“LECs“) and Interexchange Carriers (“IXCs“) are types
A common example of this would be a long-distance call from Chicago to St. Louis. In that example, AT&T Illinois (the incumbent LEC in Chicago) performs transport and switching functions and originates the call on its network, and hands the call over to an IXC, such as Sprint Long-Distance, which carries the call to St. Louis. Sprint then hands the call off to AT&T Missouri (the incumbent LEC in St. Louis), which performs switching functions and delivers the call to the called party. While the process sounds cumbersome, in practice it happens in fractions of seconds.
Peerless Network, Inc. v. MCI Commc‘ns Servs., Inc., No. 14 C 7417, 2018 WL 1378347, at *2 (N.D. Ill. Mar. 16, 2018). Switching functions include tandem switching, which connects LECs to IXCs, and end-office switching, which connects LECs to end-users.
IXCs pay a fee in exchange for access to an LEC‘s network, known as an “access service charge.” The rates are set forth either in tariffs the LEC has filed with regulatory agencies or in negotiated agreements between the IXC and LEC.
In February 2009, Peerless, an LEC, and Verizon, an IXC,1 entered into a “Tandem Service Agreement,” a contract that provided for lowered rates for certain switching services. If a contractually provided rate did not apply, Peerless billed Verizon its tariff rates, which Peerless filed with the Federal Communications Commission and state public utility commissions.
In 2013, the relationship between the parties broke down. Verizon disputed and withheld payment for certain charges on Peerless‘s bills. In September 2013, the parties entered into a standstill agreement in an attempt to avoid litigation. The agreement, however, did not have its intended effect. Verizon continued to withhold payment, and in July 2014, Peerless notified Verizon that it was replacing certain rates in the Tandem Service Agreement with the tariff rates. Verizon still withheld payment, and in September 2014, Peerless sued Verizon.
Peerless‘s complaint alleged twelve counts, but only a subset of those are relevant to this appeal.2 Counts I and II alleged a breach of the Tandem Service Agreement. Counts III through V and XI alleged a breach of federal and state tariffs and a related declaratory-judgment claim.
In defense, Verizon alleged that, for multiple reasons, Peerless was not entitled to collect on the outstanding amounts it had billed Verizon. First, Verizon asserted that Peerless qualifies as an access stimulator, which is an LEC with high rates that
Second, Verizon alleged that Peerless was billing certain services at higher rates that did not apply to those services. Specifically, Verizon alleged that Peerless (1) billed end-office rates for routing Voice over Internet Protocol (“VoIP“) calls
even though routing such calls does not meet the definition of end-office switching; and (2) billed terminating switched-access rates for routing calls to two-stage calling providers, such as prepaid calling-card services, even though Peerless was not actually terminating the calls. Verizon alleged that billing at these higher rates violated telecommunications law and the terms of Peerless‘s tariffs.
Verizon also asserted four counterclaims for breach of federal and state tariffs and related declaratory judgments. These counterclaims relied on the same access stimulation, VoIP, and two-stage calling arguments. In its breach-of-tariff counterclaims, however, Verizon sought to recover amounts it had already paid Peerless for the charges allegedly made in violation of Peerless‘s tariffs and telecommunications law.
The parties cross-moved for partial summary judgment. The district court referred the access stimulation, VoIP, and two-stage calling issues, as alleged in the counterclaims, to the FCC under the primary-jurisdiction doctrine because they involved complicated issues of telecommunications law that depended on “the resolution of numerous interpretive questions.” See United States ex rel. Sheet Metal Workers Int‘l Ass‘n, Local Union 20 v. Horning Invs., LLC, 828 F.3d 587, 592 (7th Cir. 2016) (“Primary jurisdiction is a permissive doctrine that applies when resolving a claim requires the resolution of issues which, under a regulatory scheme, have been placed within the special competence of an administrative body.“) (internal quotation marks omitted). The district court accordingly stayed Verizon‘s counterclaims.3
Despite the referral and stay, the district court granted summary judgment to Peerless on its breach-of-tariff claims. The district court concluded that Verizon‘s access stimulation defense could be adjudicated separately from Peerless‘s collection action, reasoning that Verizon was required to pay disputed charges before challenging them. The district court did not independently resolve the VoIP and two-stage calling defenses, instead stating summarily in a footnote that the same reasoning applied to those challenges.
The district court entered a partial final judgment on Peerless‘s breach-of-tariff claims pursuant to
The district court also granted summary judgment and Rule 54(b) partial final judgment on Peerless‘s claims regarding the breach of the Tandem Service Agreement. The district court concluded that Verizon had not disputed the alleged breach, only the amount owed. Verizon appeals.
II. Discussion
Neither party disputes that Verizon‘s counterclaims were properly referred to the FCC. But Verizon argues that the district court erred in granting partial final judgment on Peerless‘s breach-of-tariff claims. Because Peerless‘s entitlement to collect under its tariffs substantially overlaps with the claims that are pending in the district court and before the FCC, we agree. We therefore do not reach the underlying merits of these claims.
Peerless‘s claims that Verizon breached the Tandem Service Agreement, however, are properly before us. Verizon contests that it breached the agreement and argues that Peerless has not presented sufficient evidence to show a breach. We conclude that a genuine dispute of material fact remains on those claims and summary judgment was improper.
A. The Tariff Claims
When a case involves more than one claim,
We conduct a two-step analysis of a
Our inquiry starts and stops at the first step. The
The breach-of-tariff claims before us now and those stayed in the district court are factually and legally intertwined. Reaching the merits of this appeal would require, in part, addressing the lawfulness
True, an argument that a tariff is unreasonable or unlawful must be brought as a counterclaim and can be adjudicated separately from a collection action, including for
But the rest of Verizon‘s challenges are to Peerless‘s compliance with its own tariff rates and with federal communications law—not challenges to the tariffs themselves. Verizon argues that Peerless billed end-office switching rates for routing VoIP calls despite the fact that routing such calls does not meet the definition of end-office switching as defined in the tariff or by law.5 Verizon also argues that, in violation of the
tariff and telecommunications law, Peerless billed terminating switched-access rates for routing calls to two-stage calling providers, such as calling card services, even though those calls continue and are terminated somewhere else, for example, internationally. These complicated concepts can be distilled into a simple allegation: Peerless is billing Verizon for services it is not providing. And, unlike a pure unreasonable-rate challenge, such an allegation can serve as a defense, not just a counterclaim.
Yet, the district court conflated Verizon‘s defenses and counterclaims. It overlooked that the VoIP and two-stage arguments serve not only as a basis to recover past-paid amounts under Verizon‘s counterclaims; they also serve as defenses to the allegations that Verizon owes outstanding amounts to Peerless—defenses that would undercut any amount that Verizon purportedly owes Peerless. The district
Because the district court erred in granting partial final judgment on Peerless‘s breach-of-tariff claims, we vacate the
B. The Contract Claims
Verizon does not contend, and we do not conclude, that the district court erred in ordering
The district court did not specifically address the breach-of-contract claims in concluding that there was no just reason to delay final judgment. Understandably so—the tariff claims made up the vast majority of this nearly $50 million complex lawsuit. But the district court‘s determination that Peerless‘s interest in prompt payment outweighed the risk that Verizon may be entitled to a refund presumably applied to the contract claims as well as the tariff claims. That was not an abuse of discretion. It is unclear how long the remaining issues will be pending before the FCC, delaying the resolution of these entirely separate breach-of-contract counts. Therefore,
Verizon argues that the district court erred in granting summary judgment for Peerless on these counts. We review grants of summary judgment de novo. “Summary judgment is appropriate when there is no genuine dispute as to a material fact.” Estate of Jones v. Children‘s Hosp. & Health Sys. Inc. , 892 F.3d 919, 923 (7th Cir. 2018). When both parties have moved for summary judgment, “we construe all inferences in favor of the party against whom the motion under consideration is made.” Schlaf v. Safeguard Prop., LLC, 899 F.3d 459, 465 (7th Cir. 2018) (quoting Hendricks-Robinson v. Excel Corp., 154 F.3d 685, 692 (7th Cir. 1998)).
The district court concluded that summary judgment for Peerless was appropriate because, supposedly, Verizon did not dispute that it had failed to pay charges owed under the Tandem Service Agreement—Verizon disputed only the amount of damages. The record says otherwise. In the proceedings below, Verizon acknowledged Peerless‘s allegations that it owed outstanding amounts under the Tandem Service Agreement. Verizon responded, however, that Peerless had failed to specifically identify any unpaid invoices. Verizon also submitted an affidavit from a Senior Manager of Invoice Validation attesting that she was unaware of which invoices purportedly reflected any outstanding amount. Viewing the facts in the
Peerless argues that because Verizon and Peerless jointly stipulated to a damages amount for the breach-of-contract claims, Verizon cannot now challenge the district court‘s determination of liability on these counts. Peerless is incorrect, the stipulation is irrelevant. By that point, the district court had already found against Verizon on the issue of liability, and we allow parties to challenge a determination of liability even if they later stipulate to damages. See, e.g., Pitcher v. Principal Mut. Life Ins. Co., 93 F.3d 407, 411 (7th Cir. 1996). We conclude that the district court erred in its liability determination and improperly granted summary judgment for Peerless on Counts I and II, alleging a breach of the Tandem Service Agreement.
III. Conclusion
The district court erred in entering partial final judgment under
