SOUTHWORTH & McGILL, P.A., Appellant,
v.
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY аnd Bellsouth Advertising and Publishing Corporation, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
*629 J. Dixon Bridgers, III and Carol Ann Ruebsamen of Carlton, Fields, Ward, Emmanuel, Smith, Cutler & Kent, P.A., Pensacola, for appellant.
Robert L. Crongeyer and Larry A. Matthews of Beggs & Lane, Pensacola, for appellees.
SMITH, Judge.
This cause is before us on appeal from a final judgment granting appellees/defendants' motion for judgment on the pleadings and limiting damages in accord with an exculpatory provision in the contract between the parties. On appeаl, the issue is whether the trial court erred in ruling that the exculpatory provision was valid and controlling as a matter of law. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
The facts based on the record before us are that appellant law firm filled out appellees' form contract to purchase advertising space in the 1984/85 directory and paid the required fee. The agreement consisted of several pages entitled "Directory Advertising Order," a printed form which, on the reverse side, bears a list of "Terms and Conditions" including the following provision:
[BELLSOUTH ADVERTISING & PUBLISHING CORPORATION'S] LIABILITY AND THE TELEPHONE COMPANY'S LIABILITY (IF ANY) ON ACCOUNT OF OMISSION OR ERRORS IN SUCH ADVERTISING SHALL IN NO *630 EVENT EXCEED THE AMOUNT OF CHARGES FOR THE ADVERTISING WHICH WAS OMITTED OR IN WHICH THE ERROR OCCURRED IN THE THEN CURRENT DIRECTORY ISSUE AND SUCH LIABILITY SHALL BE DISCHARGED BY ABATEMENT OF THE CHARGES FOR THE PARTICULAR LISTING OR ADVERTISING IN WHICH THE OMISSION OR ERROR OCCURRED.
The agreement sets out the name of the firm to be listed in the directory as "Southworth and McGill, P.A." Formerly, the firm was "Kirtz, Southworth, and McGill." However, the Florida Bar suspended the first-named partner from practice. As a result of that suspension, the first-named partner ceased to be a member of the firm. The complaint alleges that the remaining partners had taken great pains to disassociate themselves from the suspended former partner.[1]
Appellant submitted the correct information to appellees, but appellees published incorrect information. The yellow pages showed the suspended former member as still being the lead partner in the firm and showed the firm as offering the legal services that the former member had performed but which were no longer offered by the firm.[2]
Immediately following the publication of the 1984/85 directory, Mr. Southworth of appellant firm wrote to appellees, strongly prоtesting the inaccuracies and pointing out the seriousness of the errors due to the circumstances involved. A copy of that letter is attached to the complaint. Despite the letter, appellees repeated the same errors in the next year's (1985/86) directory. Appellant alleges various business damage, including expenses incurred in an effort to rectify the situation caused by the erroneous ads.
Appellant filed a complaint alleging negligence, gross negligence, and breach of contract.[3] A copy of the listing agreement was attached to the complaint. Appellees answered with a general denial of breach or liability. Subsequently, appellees filed a motion for judgmеnt on the pleadings contending, among other things, that appellant's recovery, if any, was limited by the terms of the exculpatory clause to a refund of charges for the listing or advertising. Appellant's legal memorandum in response raises "unconscionability" as an absolute defense to enforcement of the exculpatory clause.
The trial court viewed the exculpatory provision as determinative of the case and entered judgment on the pleadings for appellees. Damages for breach of contract were limited to the amount paid for the listings ($645.60) in accordance with the exculpatory clause.
In reviewing the judgment on the pleadings, this court is limited to the pleadings before the court below. Factual matters which are addressed in the brief but are not part of those pleadings are not before us. We observe, initially, that many of the factual matters argued by appellant in its brief are unsupported by allegations contained in the pleadings.
"Unconscionability" as a defense to enforcement of the exculpatory clause, insofar as a ruling on that issue depends upon development of a factual basis for its application, has not been properly raised in this case. There is authority in Florida, and from other jurisdictions, that in actions based on contract "unconscionability" must be pleaded and proved by the party asserting *631 it.[4]Kohl v. Bay Colony Club Condominium,
Appellant's argument seeks to have this court align itself with the minority view condemning such exculpatory clauses in yellow page contracts. After much consideration of the conflicting decisions on this issue, we adhere to the majority view which holds that exculpatory clauses limiting liability for ordinary negligence in the publication of yellow page advertising are enforceable as a matter of private contract, and do not violate public policy. See, Annotation,
As noted in Allen v. General Tel. Co. of Northwest, Inc.,
As stated by the Washington court: "Virtually all jurisdictions have enforced such limitations and disclaimers of liability, whether contained in a filed tariff or a private contract, unless the company's negligence *632 is willful or gross." Allen v. General Tel. Co., supra,
Decisions on both sides of the unconscionability issue have been accompanied by carefully reasoned opinions, including those expressing the minority view, such as Allen v. Michigan Bell Telephone Company,
The amended complaint in this case charges that the errors and omissions in the 1984/85 directory were the result of mere negligence. It is clear, therefore, under the more numerous and, in our opinion, the more persuasive authorities, that no cаuse of action for damages in excess of the limiting clause is maintainable with respect to the 1984/85 directory. This holding is consistent with Florida case law. Although it is true, as argued by appellant, that no Florida court has specifically articulated a response to the "unconscionability" argument, Florida cases have ruled consistently with the majority view. Advance Service, Inc. v. General Telephone Co. of Fla.,
In a Third District case, Electronic Security Systems v. Southern Bell,
Finally, since the count for breach of contract for errors in the 1985/86 listing alleges that these errors resulted from willful, malicious, or grossly negligent actions on the part of the defendants, the exculpatory clause limiting liability for "errors and *634 omissions" was ineffective to bar the action for damages for that directory year. As frequently recognized by the Florida courts, exculpatory clauses are not favored in the law, and Florida law requires that such clauses bе strictly construed against the party claiming to be relieved of liability.[10] Such clauses are enforceable only where and to the extent that the intention to be relieved was made clear and unequivocal in the contract, and the wording must be so clear and understandable that an ordinary and knowledgeable party will know what he is contracting away. Fuentes v. Owen,
We would therefore reverse and remand for trial with respect to damages for the 1985/86 directory year, based upon breach of contract occasioned by willful, malicious, or grossly negligent conduct on the part of appellees.
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part, and REMANDED for further prоceedings.
NIMMONS, J., concurs.
BOOTH, J., concurs in part and dissents in part.
BOOTH, Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I would hold that the complaint in its entirety states a cause of action and is not subject to judgment on the pleadings.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Letter from appellant to appellees attached to complaint specifies that efforts of the remaining partners to disassociate themselves from the suspended former member included moving to a new office and installing a new phone system with no referral service from the old number.
[2] Other errors in the published advertisement are alleged, to wit, including the name of a former associate who was no longer with the firm.
[3] The trial court entered judgment on the pleadings as to the tort claim, finding that there was no tort independent of the breach of contract and no basis for award of punitive damages. Appellant does not contest this ruling on appeal. AFM Corp. v. Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Co.,
[4] In actions sounding in tort, the defendant relying upon an exculpatory clause would most likely be compelled to assert the clause as an affirmative defense.
[5] Publication and distribution of a directory containing an alphabetical listing of subscribers and telephone numbers is mandаtory in Florida under rule of the Florida Public Service Commission, Rule 25-4.040, F.A.C. There are no laws or rules with respect to the yellow page advertising directory with exception of provisions with respect to allocation of gross profits from advertising in connection with establishing rates. § 364.037, F.S. (1989). It has been held that directory advertising is not within the scope of the telephone company's function as a regulated industry in Florida. Executive Services v. Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company,
[6] The Allen (Mich. App.) case was criticized, however, a few years after its release, in Robinson Ins. and Rеal Estate, Inc. v. Southwestern Bell Tel. Co., supra, at page 310, as representing "a departure from the majority view recognizing freedom to contract, ... based upon faulty notions of the public interest, and ... not in keeping with commercial realities." See also, Allen v. Michigan Bell Telephone Company,
[7] In Morgan, the plaintiffs, two periodontists, alleged negligence, breach of contract and fraud; and these issues were submitted to the jury with respect to all directory errors except for the yеar 1980, as to which recovery was allowed based on negligence or breach of contract.
[8] The reason for absence of discussion in the Electronic Security opinion of the effect of intentional omissions is not apparent; as a matter of speculation, it may be accounted for either by the lack of a pleading asserting intentional acts in connection with the breach of contract claim, or by an absence of any evidentiary fact supporting such claim sufficient to defeat the motion for summary judgment.
[9] The A.F.M. decision would seem to put to rest any notion, suggested by dicta found in this court's opinion in Allen v. Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co.,
[10] See Van Tuyn v. Zurich American Insurance Company,
