¶ 1. In Wisconsin a forum-selection clause is presumptively valid. A court will refuse to enforce the clause only if there is a quantum of
¶ 2. Robert Pietroske has forty-two years of business experience, the last twenty-seven years as the owner of Pietroske, Inc., a General Motors dealership. Robert is solely responsible for negotiating business contracts, including contracts for telecommunication services. On March 14, 2000, on behalf of Pietroske, Inc., Robert entered into a contract with Globalcom, Inc., for telephone services. The contract, prepared by Globalcom, is a one-sheet standard form contract or service agreement; the front side is a series of sections with fill-in-the-blanks to gather specific information on the services Globalcom will provide to the buyer. At the bottom of the front side is "Section 9 Customer Authorization," which contains the following language immediately above the customer's signature: "The customer understands and agrees that all of Globalcom® services are provided under. . . the terms and conditions set forth on the reverse side of this form." The reverse side is two columns, in one size typeface, and contains general terms of the service agreement, including guarantee, cancellation/default, interruption of service, payment and billing, and liability. The last two sentences of paragraph "g" of cancellation/default provide: "Customer agrees that all disputes will be under the laws of the State of Illinois. Venue shall be in Cook county, Illinois." 1
¶ 4. The circuit court denied the motion. In its oral decision, the circuit court conducted both a substantive and a procedural unconscionability analysis. The court held that the forum-selection clause was unreasonably favorable to Globalcom.
The court will, however, conclude that — that a contract term that provides in all situations that a contract is going to be resolved in the seller's home court is certainly favorable to the seller or the defendant in this case. And I will conclude that where the contract does include that language, and there's been no specific mention of that language, nor has it been called to the attention of the purchaser, in this case the plaintiff, one could conclude that that contract term is unreasonably favorable to the other pariy. That is, it's not a bargain for benefit, it's not something that the other side signed off on specifically, although obviously it wasn't read.
Globalcom sought leave to appeal from the order denying its motion to enforce the forum-selection clause. We granted its petition because an appeal would materially advance the termination of the litigation. Wis. Stat. § 808.03(2)(a) (2001-02). 2
The rule of law in Wisconsin is that a forum selection clause is enforceable unless the contract provision is substantively unreasonable in view of the bargaining power of the parties. The conclusion that a contract clause is or is not valid involves determinations of fact and law. An evidentiary hearing is required to enable the court to make the necessary factual findings to support a conclusion that a clause is unconscionable.
Leasefirst v. Hartford Rexall Drugs, Inc.,
The trial court's decision that a clause is or is not valid involves determinations of fact and law and will be reviewed as such. The reviewing court will uphold the factual determinations underlying its legal conclusion unless they are contrary to the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence. Whether the facts fulfill the legal standard, here reasonableness, is a determination of law, and ordinarily the appellate court need not defer to the trial court's determination of a question of law.
Wassenaar v. Panos,
¶ 6. In the context of a forum-selection clause, we are concerned about procedural and substantive uncon-scionability.
Leasefirst,
¶ 7. We conclude that there is no substantive unconscionability in the forum-selection clause. It is reasonable for Globalcom to select its headquarters' city as the forum of choice; all of Globalcom's records and employee-witnesses would be located there. In this case, it is reasonable to require Pietroske, Inc., to travel to Cook county to pursue its dispute with Globalcom because Robert is the only employee of Pietroske, Inc., who is authorized to contract for telecommunication
¶ 8. We also conclude that there is no procedural unconscionability. Nothing in the contract prevented a true meeting of the minds. In
Leasefirst,
¶ 9. The format of the service agreement does not suggest procedural unconscionability. As previously described, the service agreement is one page, front and back. Directly above Robert's signature is a one-paragraph warning that there were terms and conditions on the reverse side to which Pietroske, Inc., would
Ours is not a bazaar economy in which the terms of every transaction, or even of most transactions, are individually dickered; even when they are, standard clauses are commonly incorporated in the final contract, without separate negotiation of each of them. Form contracts, and standard clauses in individually negotiated contracts, enable enormous savings in transaction costs, and the abuses to which they occa- ■ sionally give rise can be controlled without altering traditional doctrines, provided those doctrines are interpreted flexibly, realistically. If a clause really is buried in illegible "fine print" — or if... it plainly is neither intended nor likely to be read by the other party — this circumstance may support an inference of fraud, and fraud is a defense to a contract.
¶ 10. This case does have one similarity with
Leasefirst,
¶ 11. Robert, as a savvy businessperson, had an obligation to read the service agreement presented by Globalcom.
Failure to read a contract, particularly in a commercial contract setting, is not an excuse that relieves a person from the obligations of the contract. "Men, in their dealings with each other, cannot close their eyes to the means of knowledge equally accessible to themselves and those with whom they deal, and then ask courts to reheve them from the consequences of their lack of vigilance." Nauga, Inc. v. Westel Milwaukee Co., Inc.,216 Wis. 2d 306 , 314-15,576 N.W.2d 573 (Ct. App. 1998) (quoting this court's decision in Carney-Rutter Agency v. Central Office Bldgs.,263 Wis. 244 , 252-253,57 N.W.2d 348 (1953)).
Deminsky v. Arlington Plastics Mach.,
[I]f it was a mistake at all, [it] may have been one resulting from what could be termed conscious ignorance — an ignorance inevitably present in myriad situations in which people simply have no desire, incentive or need to know details that might alter their view of the fairness of a transaction. Restatement (Seoond) of CONTRACTS § 154 cmt. c (1979) explains:
Conscious ignorance. Even though the mistaken party did not agree to bear the risk, he may have been aware when he made the contract that his knowledge with respect to the facts to which the mistake relates was limited. If he was not only so aware that his knowledge was limited but undertook to perform in the face of that awareness, he bears the risk of the mistake. It is sometimes said in such a situation that, in a sense, there was not mistake but "conscious ignorance." (Citation omitted.)
¶ 12. The circuit court erred when it found the forum-selection clause unenforceable because it had not been pointed out to Robert. The unconscionability question requires a balancing approach.
Deminsky,
By the Court. — Order reversed.
Notes
We note that the contract at issue did not contain a choice of law clause.
All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2001-02 version unless otherwise noted.
Leasefirst v. Hartford Rexall Drugs, Inc.,
Under the "procedural" rubric come those factors bearing upon. .. the "real and voluntary meeting of the minds" of the contracting parties: age, education, intelligence, business acumen and experience, relative bargaining power, who drafted the contract, whether the terms were explained to the weaker party, whether alterations in the printed terms were possible, whether there were alternative sources of supply for the goods in question.
Disc. Fabric House,
