MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
The contract between the parties contains this clause:
If the Dealer’s period of appointment expires and no new Authorized Dealer Agreement is entered into or if such appointment is canceled for any reason, neither party shall be entitled to any compensation or reimbursement for loss of prospective profits, anticipated sales or other losses occasioned by the termination of the relationship, except as provided in this Agreement.
John Deere Agriculture Dealer Agreement cl. 4 (hereafter referred to as Dealer Agreement or the contract), Exhibit A to the Complaint and to defendant’s motion for partial summary judgment. On defend *809 ant’s motion for partial summary judgment I held that if plaintiff established a right of recovery this clause would bar the use of lost profits as a measure of damages. See Stanley A. Klopp, Inc. v. John Deere Co., (E.D.Pa. Huyett, J., 1980). Plaintiff seeks reconsideration.
Plaintiff Stanley A. Klopp, Inc. (Klopp) had been a John Deere authorized dealer since 1936. Complaint ¶ 8. The parties had annually executed a dealer franchise agreement. Id. ¶ 5. In 1965, the contract contained for the first time a clause which prohibited the recovery of lost profits. Affidavit of John C. Schuett, Exhibit B to defendant’s motion for partial summary judgment. In 1972, insignificant language changes were made and the clause has appeared in all future contracts. 1
The contract also contains the following clause relating to the termination of the franchise agreement by the company’s failure to offer a new agreement:
It is intended that each succeeding year the Company will offer the Dealer a new Authorized Dealer Agreement if the Company believes that the Dealer’s area of responsibility continues to afford sufficient sales potential to reasonably support an authorized dealer and that the Dealer has fulfilled the requirements of his appointment or has corrected or taken appropriate action toward correcting deficiencies in his operations which have been called to his attention by the Company. If, however, the Company determines that the Dealer’s area of responsibility does not afford sufficient sales potential to continue to support an authorized dealer, or, if the Company believes the Dealer has not fulfilled the requirements of his appointment, it has the right to terminate its relationship with the Dealer by not offering to enter into such a new Agreement.
Dealer Agreement cl. 3. This same clause requires the company to give a dealer at least twelve months’ notice of its intention not to offer the dealer a new contract. This clause applies only to the company. There is no accompanying duty on the part of the dealer to notify the company in advance of its intention not to accept. Id. In May, 1978 defendant John Deere Company (Deere) notified the plaintiff that it would not be offering Klopp a new contract in October of 1979. Complaint ¶ 10. Thus, Deere gave the plaintiff more than the twelve months’ notice required by the contract. In October, 1978 defendant offered and plaintiff accepted what was to be the last contract between the parties. Plaintiff brought suit initially for injunctive relief but has since amended its complaint to demand money damages. See Amendment to Complaint, April 23, 1980.
1. As a matter of law, is the clause in the Dealer Agreement barring the recovery of lost profits enforceable?
In its response to defendant’s partial summary judgment motion plaintiff argued,
inter alia,
that the no-lost-profits clause should not be enforced because it is an unconscionable clause, citing sections 2-302 and 2-719(3) of the Pennsylvania Uniform Commercial Code (UCC). 13 Pa.Cons. Stat.Ann. §§ 2302, 2719. Neither party has addressed the issue of whether the contract between these parties is within the purview of the sales article of the UCC, however, even if the UCC does not apply by its own terms, it represents a policy statement by the state legislature concerning good faith, as applicable to a franchise agreement as to a conventional article 2 contract for the sale of goods.
See Zapatha v. Dairy Mart Inc.,
- Mass.App. -,
The same cannot be said of the law developed to govern contracts between con
*810
sumers and businesspersons such as
Williams v. Walker-Thomas Furniture Company,
Unconscionability is a question of law for the court.
See Phillips Machinery Co. v. LeBlond, Inc.,
Unconscionability is the rubric under which the judiciary may refuse to enforce unfair or oppressive contracts in the absence of fraud or illegality. Although the concept is not susceptible of precise definition, nonetheless some convenient formulations exist. Unconscionability may be expressed as the lack of meaningful choice coupled with a contract term which is so one-sided as to be oppressive.
See W. L. May Co., Inc. v. Philco-Ford Corp.,
The avoidance of unfair surprise requires that the language of the clause be clear and precise.
See K & C, Inc. v. Westinghouse Electric Corp.,
[Wjhile limitations of damages clauses such as this one do not appear in all distributorship agreements, they are not uncommon. The purpose of such clauses is to protect both parties from having to pay lost profits in the event of termination, since either the manufacturer or distributor may decide to terminate and give their business to a competitor.
Plaintiff has contended that there was inequality of bargaining power between these parties, although it offers no affidavit or discovery evidence' to put this in issue. Bargaining power is as much a function of market forces as it is of size. Therefore, a bare allegation of disparate size does not necessarily warrant an inference of disparate bargaining power. Nonetheless, accepting plaintiff’s contention would not alter the outcome. Mere unequal bargaining power between contracting parties does not render their contracts unconscionable.
Phillips Machinery Co. v. LeBlond, Inc.,
Plaintiff has also alleged that when the contract was signed by its president, he did not read it because he believed “that the agreements were similar in substance to the Agricultural Dealer Agreement for the preceding year.” Affidavit of Klopp and Keener, attached to plaintiff’s response to defendant’s motion for summary judgment. According to this affidavit, plaintiff followed this procedure and acted under this assumption from at least 1952. According to the defendant and undisputed by the plaintiff, the no-lost-profits clause was first added in 1965. The general rule is that absent an allegation of fraud or incompetence a person has a duty to read a contract before signing it and his failure to do so will not excuse his ignorance of its contents.
See Design & Development, Inc. v. Vibromatic Mfg., Inc.,
The undisputed facts show that the contract was signed on behalf of the plaintiff by a businessman with over forty years’ experience. The business relationship between the plaintiff and the defendant was of equal duration. There are no genuine issues of material facts relating to the commercial setting. As a matter of law, I conclude that there was no procedural unfairness in the execution of the contract containing the clause.
See Tacoma Boat Building Co. v. Delta Fishing Co.,
2. Does the alleged wrongful termination’ of the franchise effect the enforceability of the clause limiting liability?
The plaintiff has devoted much of its energy both in opposition to the original motion and in its motion for reconsideration *812 to arguing that the termination of plaintiff’s dealer franchise was wrongful. Based on this the plaintiff argues first, that the limitation clause does not apply in the case of wrongful termination and in the alternative, that wrongful termination would vitiate the limitations clause.
I reject plaintiff’s first argument that the clause does not apply in the case of a breach of the agreement because that would render it meaningless. The plain language of the clause states in the event the parties’ relationship ceases neither side will be entitled to lost profits. The plaintiff argues that the clause was intended only to make lost profits unavailable when the contract is terminated according to its terms. What the plaintiff’s interpretation overlooks is that if the contract were terminated according to its terms, there would be no breach of contract. If there is no breach, there is no right to recover and if there is no right to recover, there is no exposure to limit. Plaintiff’s interpretation reads the clause as simply stating the obvious, that is, if there is no breach, then there is no recovery. This defies common sense as well as the rules of contract interpretation. See 4 S. Williston, Contracts § 601, at 310 '(3d ed. W. Jaeger 1961) (contracts should be construed so that no terms are rendered meaningless).
Plaintiff’s second argument, that the termination was wrongful and this renders the limitation clause unenforceable, is similarly flawed. The question of whether the termination was wrongful depends upon events surrounding the notice of termination and the events which the parties contend precipitated the notice. Those facts are irrelevant to a determination of whether the limitations clause is unenforceable because it is unconscionable. The issue of unconscionability is to be determined as of the date the contract was made.
See Phillips Machinery Co. v. LeBlond, Inc.,
Notes
. The first limitation of liability clause provided: “If no new Agreement is entered into, neither party is entitled to any compensation or reimbursement for loss of prospective profits, anticipated sales or other losses occasioned by the termination of the relationship, except as provided in this Agreement.” Affidavit of Schuett, supra.
