Plaintiff-Counter Defendant-Appellant-Cross Appellee, Taita Chemical Co., Ltd. (“Taita”), appeals the District Court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Defendant-Counter Claimant-Appellee-Cross Appellant, Westlake Styrene Corporation (‘Westlake”). Westlake cross-appeals, protesting the District Court’s grant of a partial summary judgment in favor of Taita and the dismissal of its counterclaim. For the following reasons we affirm in part and reverse in part.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In 1990, four companies, including Taita, entered into a joint venture to form West-lake. The joint venture shareholders owned Westlake in the following percentages: (1) Taita — 40%; (2) BTR Nylex, Ltd. (“BTR”) — 20%; (3) the Chao Group— 20%; and (4) the Sumitomo Corporation and Sumitomo Corporation of America— 20%. 1 Westlake produces and sells styrene monomer.
On January 15, 1991, Taita and Wеst-lake entered into a contract known as the “Off-Take Agreement.” This long-term agreement was a take-or-pay contract, under which Taita agreed to purchase 40% of Westlake’s styrene monomer production capacity each month for the duration of the contract. Price was to be determined on a monthly basis in accordance with the contract’s pricing clause. This clause provided that each month Taita was to receive the lowest of three alternative prices:
4. Price
The Contract Price per pound of Product delivered or ordered for delivery, including Deemed Delivery, during each month shall be the U.S. Gulf Coast Styrene Monomer prices, net after all discounts, for contract transactiоns as last published in each month by DeWitt & Company, Incorporated in its Benzene & Derivatives Newsletter, or the price for such month charged by WSC [West-lake Styrene Corp.] to a consumer under a firm multi-year contract or the posted contract market price for comparable volumes of Product, whichever is lower. Should such publication cease to be published, Buyer and Seller shall mutually select other representative publications.
The meaning of this pricing clause and the parties’ conduct with respect to its terms lies at the center of this dispute. In essence, Taita argues that Westlake over
A rather substantial factual dissertation is needed in order to lay the groundwork for the Court’s otherwise brief discussion. Many оf these facts are not overtly disputed. Other facts, however, as well as what inferences should be drawn from the undisputed facts, remain in issue. As this case comes before us following a grant of Westlake’s motion for summary judgment, our presentation of the facts is thus intentionally colored, to a degree, by our obligation to view the evidence in the light most favorable to Taita.
The harbinger of this dispute could be seen as early as June 1994. At that time Ken O’Neill (“O’Neill”), then Westlake’s president, queried Taita regarding whether Taita would permit Westlake to enter into a long-term contract to sell styrene to another customer at a lower price without Taita asserting its “most favored nations” rights. Taita president Graeme Bulmer (“Bulmer”) responded that Taitа would immediately demand the lower price in accordance with the contract. Thus, later that year, when Westlake entered into a contract to sell styrene production,. the contract included a “meet or release” clause, which excused performance if market prices for styrene fell below an agreed level. Taita and Westlake apparently agreed that such a clause prevented the contract from becoming a “firm multi-year contract” as is required to trigger Taita’s “most favored nations” rights. Therefore, despite this foreshadowing, the pricing issue did not ripen until the end of 1994.
Then in December 1994, Westlake’s outgoing president, O’Neill, recommended to the Westlake board that it approve sеveral multi-year contracts to sell styrene, including deals with Novacor Chemicals, Inc. (“Novacor”) and Cook Composites & Polymers Company (“Cook Composites”). 2 The Novacor agreement involved the sale of roughly 25% of the monthly volume that Taita was required to purchase from West-lake, while the Cook Composites arrangement was for less than 10% of Taita’s purchase volume. Thus, although Novacor and Cook Composites were both to be purchasing smaller volumes of styrene than was Taita, they nonetheless were to receive lower prices than Taita was paying.
Soon thereafter, Taita, through O’Neill, now its new president, pointed to the Off-Take Agreement’s “most favored nations” clause and demanded that Westlake honor its right to receive the lower price provided to Novacor.
3
Steve Bayless (“Bay-
While Taita dithered and declined to show its hand, Bayless, on May 9, 1995, further corresponded with Taita, arguing that Taita remained in breach of the Off-Take Agreement and, further, threatened to cut off Taita’s styrene supply if Taita did not remit the amounts past due. As of May 31, 1995, Taita had not yet paid West-lake, despite indicating that it would do so, albeit under protest. This prompted another fаcsimile letter from Bayless to Tai-ta, and yet another on June 9, 1995, by which time Taita had fallen further behind on its payments. At this juncture, Taita finally acceded to Bayless’ request, becoming current and paying invoices in full as they came due. Taita’s payments did not, however, specifically indicate that they were being made “under protest.” Taita nevertheless contends that its compliance with Bayless’ request, and its continued payment of invoices as received, did not indicate any agreement on its part with the position urged by Westlake. Instead, Taita alleges that it could not risk losing its source of styrene supply at that time, and, moreover, it felt that the pricing issue might have been about to become moot, at least prospectivеly, in light of a contemplated arrangement between the several Westlake stockholders. 5
Purportedly, Taita had also chosen to bide its time on the pricing issue until a “firm multi-year contract” was signed and
Bulmer wrote Westlake’s Bayless to confirm Taita’s understanding that the Cook Composites contract provided a more favоrable price than Taita was receiving. Bulmer’s inquiry, in a September 18, 1995 letter regarding Westlake’s proposed 1996 budget, questioned whether Westlake’s budget reflected Taita’s right to receive the lower price seen in the now finalized, and thus “firm,” Cook Composites agreement. Bayless responded that the Cook Composites price was not for a comparable volume, and that he believed that Taita’s discount argument had already been considered and rejected earlier in 1995. In this regard, Bayless pointed to Taita’s alleged acquiescence in Westlake’s position with respect to the previously sought after Novacor contract-based discount.
Several days later, on September 26, 1995, Bulmer responded to Bаyless by contending that Taita had only paid the disputed Novacor amounts because the Nova-cor contract was not “firm,” as it had not been formally signed and approved by the Westlake board. Bayless responded with surprise and reiterated Westlake’s view that Taita had waived its right to complain by paying the invoices following the parties’ prior skirmish over Taita’s claimed Novacor-based “most favored nations” rights. On October 9, 1995, Bulmer sent a final letter to Bayless in which he noted Taita’s disagreement with Westlake’s position and indicated that Taita would respond further under separate cover. Bul-mer had in fact drafted a harsh letter, on October 3, setting forth Taita’s position of objection in detail, but he never sent this letter per the instructions of BTR’s managing director Phillip Aiken, who apparently wished to deal with the dispute at an upcoming November 1995 Westlake board meeting. Neither Taita nor BTR raised the pricing issue at this meeting, and Tai-ta’s and BTR’s board members voted to approve the proposed 1996 budget, which did not include discounts for Taita. 7
This September and October 1995 round of correspondence was the last formal exchange between the parties on this disputed pricing issue. They continued to negotiate, however, on efforts to terminate the Off-Take Agreement, or for BTR and Tai-ta to divest themselves of their Westlake holdings. Taita alleges that it did not wish to actively press the “most favored nations” pricing issue in late 1995, via litigation or otherwise, because оf the sensitivity of these ongoing efforts. Taita does, however, point to evidence purportedly indicating that it had not agreed to West-lake’s interpretation of the pricing agreement, and that Westlake, in fact, knew Taita continued to disagree. First, Allen
However, despite Taita’s contention that it never agreed with Westlake’s interpretation of the pricing clause, and in stark juxtaposition with its cited evidence of non-acquiescence, Taita continued to pay Westlake’s invoices as they came due. It is thus undisputed that for the next fourteen months, from November 1995 — December 1996, Taita paid each undiscounted invoice it received.
In December 1996, BTR finally sold its, and Taita’s, combined 60% interest in Westlake to the Chao Group. As a result of this sale, the Off-Take Agreement was effectively canceled, with BTR agreeing to continue purchasing styrene from West-lake under a different pricing formula. As mentioned, the termination agreement did not include any type of releаse of claims as between the parties.
Soon thereafter, BTR sold Taita, and in the summer of 1997, Taita’s new shareholders became aware of the potential claim that Taita had against Westlake for styrene overcharges. Taita then filed suit, on December 9, 1997, alleging 18 million dollars in damages. Taita advanced claims for: (1) breach of contract, premised on Westlake’s failure to extend Taita its “most favored nations” discount based upon the Cook Composites contract and (2) payment of a thing not owed.
9
In the District Court, below, Taita moved for partial summary judgment regarding the meaning of the Off-Take Agreement’s pricing clause. On this issue, the District
DISCUSSION
I. Standard ofRevieiu
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.
See Geoscan, Inc. of Texas v. Geotrace Techs., Inc.,
Procedurally, the party moving for summary judgment bears the initial burden of “informing the district court of the basis for its motion, and identifying those portions of [the record] which it believes demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.”
Celotex Corp.,
II. The Pricing Clause
Westlake argues, by way of crоss-appeal, that the District Court erred in determining that the pricing clause in the Off-Take Agreement is unambiguous.
The parties agree that Louisiana law governs our analysis in this diversity of citizenship case. In Louisiana, the interpretation of an unambiguous contract is an issue of law for the court.
See Texas E. Transmission Corp. v. Amerada Hess Corp.,
III. Westlake’s Affirmative Defenses
After granting the partial summary judgment in Taita’s favor regarding the meaning of the pricing clause, the District Court turned to Westlake’s various asserted affirmative defenses: modification, waiver and estoppel. The District Court determined that Westlake had proven each of these three defenses as a matter of law, and thus granted summary judgment.
A. Modification
The District Court held below, and Westlake now argues on appeal, that Taita’s conduct served to modify the Off-Take Agreement. The Louisiana Civil Code provides that a contract is an “agreement by two or more parties whereby obligations are created, modified, or extinguished.” La. Civ.Code Ann. art. 1906. In order for a contract to be formed, both parties must consent.
See id.
at art. 1927. This consent may be manifested by a writing, or be made orally, or by “action or inaction that under the circumstances is clearly indicative of consent.”
Id.
It follows that silence may also be a form of inaction indicating consent, provided that the silence “leads the offeror to reasonably
The issue therefore becomes whether Taita consented either expressly or impliedly to a modification of the pricing clаuse, because modification requires a meeting of the minds.
See
La. Civ.Code Ann. art. 1927;
Interstate Fire & Cas. Co.,
B. Waiver
Waiver is defined as the “intentional relinquishment of a known right, power, or privilege.”
Steptore v. Masco Constr. Co.,
Westlake must therefore establish either that Taita: (1) intended to waive its rights under the contract or (2) acted in a manner so inconsistent with this right as to induce a reasonable belief in Westlake that Taita did intend to waive its right. Any effort by Westlake to establish that Taita intended to waive its “most favored nations” rights fails at the summary judgment stage for the same reasons that Westlake’s modification defense fails. Taita has introduced enough evidence to create a fact issue on what it intended with respect to the pricing clause. The second means of proving waiver, by conduct inducing a reasonable belief, likewise fails at the summary judgment stage. This is so because Taita’s objective evidence of its own intent is also probative of whether its conduct was so inconsistent with its contractual rights as to induce a belief in Westlake of waiver; again creating a fact issue. Moreover, Westlake fails to carry its summary judgment burden of demonstrating the reasonableness of its beliefs. In this regard, we refer back to the untenable pricing clause interpretation advanced by Westlake, which underlies this dispute. A reasonable juror could conclude that Westlake could not have reasonably be
C. Equitable Estoppel
The Louisiana Supreme Court has defined equitable estoppel as “ ‘the effect of the voluntary conduct of a party whereby he is precluded from asserting rights against another who has justifiably relied upon such conduct and changed his position so that he will suffer injury if the former is allowed to repudiate the conduct.’ ”
Morris v. Friedman,
Westlake’s allegations in support of equitable estoppel are essentially as follows. Taita’s conduct amounted to a representation that it had no right to “most favored nations” pricing based upon the sale of a non-comparable volume of styrene monomer. Westlake justifiably relied upon this representation to its detriment, in that it permitted Taita and BTR to sell their interests in Westlake to the Chao Group. This sale terminated the Off-Take Agreement, at a price that did not reflect a possible claim for overcharges by Taita. Thus, Westlake’s present shareholders were left with full liability for a claim for which Taita and BTR, as stockholders, would have born 60% of the financial burden.
Several items counsel against the District Court’s decision to grant Westlake’s Motion for Summary Judgment on this issue. Taita has advanced evidence, as discussed above, that Westlake knew that it had not dropped the overcharge issue. Additionally, under Louisiana law, West-lake cannot invoke equitable estoppel against Taita if Westlake could have readily ascertained the true facts with respect to Taita’s ongoing position regarding the “most favored nations” clause. This duty to investigate is not a hollow pronouncement of horn-book law in Louisiana. Rather, Louisiana courts regularly deny estoppel based, at leást in part, on failures in this regard.
See Knippers v. Lambard,
IV. Payment of a Thing Not Owed
Taita also asserted a code-based cause of action for “payment of a thing not owed.” See La. Civ.Code Ann. art. 2299. The District Court determined that West-lake’s affirmative defenses barred this claim for the same reasons that these defenses barred Taita’s breach of contract claim. Because we reverse the District Court’s summary judgment based upon the affirmative defenses, we are compelled to reverse the dismissal of Taita’s payment of a thing not owed cause of action. 13
CONCLUSION
The District Court properly granted partial summary judgment in favor Taita with respect to the proper reading of the Off-Take Agreement’s pricing clausе. We therefore AFFIRM the District Court’s decision in this regard.
With respect to the affirmative defenses advanced by Westlake, however, the District Court, despite a protracted, meticulous and remarkably workmanlike effort, erred in granting summary judgment. We simply cannot say with the requisite certitude that Westlake has carried its summary judgment burden of establishing any one of its affirmative defenses as a matter of law. The imprimatur of a jury is important in a complex case such as this, even if said jury ultimately reaches the same conclusion as that seen in the District Court’s able analysis. We therefore REVERSE the District Court’s grant of summary judgment that was based upon Westlake’s asserted affirmative defenses. We likewise REVERSE the dismissal of West-
Notes
. BTR held a 51% majority interest in Taita. Therefore, BTR and Taita collectively owned 60% of Westlake.
. Of some interest, at least with respect to Westlake’s conspiratorial theory of this case, O’Neill left Westlake to assume the presidency of Taita. At this December board meeting, O'Neill did not explain to the board that these contracts could trigger Taita’s right to a lower price. O’Neill has testified that he assumed each board member was aware of such ramifications.
. The Novacor contract was allegedly closest to completion at this point and as such Taita's complaint in early 1995 was based upon the Novacor contract, rаther than the Cook Com
. It seems that Taita expressed uncertainty regarding whether the Novaeor contract had been formally signed, even though shipments to Novaeor were ongoing. Taita allegedly did not want to press its pricing claim too vigorously until it knew that the Novaeor sale was a "firm multi-year contract” that would trigger the "most favored nations” clause. In this regard it is helpful to note, as set forth above, that prior agreements by Westlake to sell styrene at lower prices had included a "meet or release” clause, which excused performance if market prices for styrene fell too low. Rightly or wrongly, the parties apparently had not viewed such arrangements as "firm multi-year contracts." Thus, Taita believed that оnly particular types of styrene sales would trigger its "most favored nations” rights.
. The Westlake stockholders were considering whether to take all styrene produced by West-lake under a new proportionate off-take agreement, with each paying the same price. Although this course of action was never ultimately taken, the stockholders allegedly continued to discuss the possibility from April to September 1995, during which time Taita did not wish to rock the boat. In September, however, the bottom fell out of the styrene monomer market, which made it uneconomical for Westlake, and correspondingly its other investors, to pursue this option.
. The Westlake board approved this contract at its July 21, 1995 meeting, at which time the Taita and BTR board mеmbers made no mention of any intention to claim a discount. Westlake now counsels that this silence was momentous, because the lost profit required to give Taita the later demanded discount would have exceeded the total revenue from the Cook Composites deal, an arrangement that would of course accrue to the benefit of only Taita and BTR, and not the other West-lake shareholders.
. Again Westlake cries foul, but Taita contends that approving a budget without reference to Taita's potential claim was acceptable accounting and thus not inconsistent with its protest.
. The parties sharply disagree about the meaning of this report. The District Court adopted Westlake’s view that this report actually contemplated a scenario in which Taita would purchase the Chao Groups' interest and then restructure the Off-Take Agreement in a manner similar to the Cook Composites deal. Hence the "Cook” reference. This is certainly plausible, but so too is Taita’s position which we are bound to give credence to at the summary judgment stage.
. Taita's amended complaint also set forth claims of bad faith, duress, fraud, unjust enrichment, and an alternative breach of contract claim based upon the "DeWitt” pricing mechanism. Taita's opening brief does not address error with respect to these causes of action. Accordingly, we find that Taita has waived these claims.
See Carmon v. Lubrizol Corp.,
. Moreover, the DeWitt Newsletter price, which is the first pricing mechanism, apparently did not publish volume information. The "comparable volumes” language, therefore, could not have been applicable to all three mechanisms. Accordingly, it is apparent that reading the clause in the manner urged by Westlake would be inconsistent with not only English grammar, but reality. In a tortured recognition of the inherent rhetorical flaws in its argument, Westlake now argues that the "comparable volumes” language modifies only the second and third pricing mechanisms. We reject this argument.
. Westlake makes much of two Louisiana cases in which the repeated paying of increased invoiced amounts was held to indicate a modification of the parties’ pricing agreement.
See Ceco Corp. v. Mid-Gulf Coustr., Inc.,
. Taita contends that
Steptore
and
Tate
have eased the traditional burden of proving waiver, by providing that waiver may be established by the inducement of a reasonable belief even absent actual intent to waive. According to Taita, these cases must be considered in the context of insurance coverage law, a situation in which the parties have inherently unequal bargaining power that the Louisiana Supreme Court obviously sought to ameliorate. We disagree. It may be true that the court expanded its definition of waiver to alleviate inequities in the insurance context, but it nonetheless set forth a general concept that this Court has previously found broadly applicable.
See Specialty Healthcare Mgmt., Inc. v. St. Mary Parish Hosp.,
. The District Court ruling also discussed a difficult issue regarding a January 1, 1996 revision to the Louisiana Civil Code. See La. Civ.Code. Ann. arts. 2298-2305. Westlake argues that prior to this revision, a party could only recover payments that were not knowingly made in error. By contrast, post-revision, the code estаblishes that unknown error is not a prerequisite to recovery. See id. We decline to reach the propriety of the District Court's discussion of this issue. It seems to us that in a case involving an express contract such as this, the viability of the code-based claim is congruent with the primaiy claim for breach of contract. Thus, there seems to be no reason to make an unneeded prediction of Louisiana law when Taita’s recovery under Article 2299 cannot possibly exceed the amount it might recover on its breach of contract claim. We note, however, that the District Court’s discussion ignores a critical accrual issue: Taita made payments both before and after the code change. Thus, to the extent that Taita’s Article 2299 claim has some importance that we have overlooked, the accrual issue would need to be addressed on remand.
