Kellogg Associates and Evergreen Partners (“the advisors”) were hired by Tran-zact Technologies, Ltd. to perform advisory services for Tranzact. When Tranzact sold some of its assets to another company, the advisors sought payment of an investment banking fee. Tranzact determined that payment was not required, and sought a declaratory judgment in federal court. It also sued the advisors for breach of contract on the ground that the advisors had failed to perform all services required under the agreement. The advisors coun-tersued for breach of contract based on Tranzact’s refusal to pay the fee. The district court granted summary judgment to Tranzact on the advisors’ claim and also granted summary judgment sua sponte to the advisors on Tranzact’s breach of contract claim. Because the agreement between Tranzact and the advisors reveals that the advisors are not entitled to a fee based upon a sale of assets, and because Tranzact has not persuaded us that it has a valid breach of contract claim, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
In 1996, Tranzact Technologies, Ltd. engaged Kellogg Associates and Evergreen Partners to perform financial advisory services in connection with a possible sale of or investment in Tranzact. John Lane of Evergreen drafted an agreement, with input from Dan Kellogg of Kellogg Associates and Mike Regan of Tranzact. The agreement was finalized in June 1997. Under its terms, Lane and Kellogg were to receive a $40,000 up-front retainer, and an investment banking fee contingent “upon successful completion of the Transaction.” The agreement explained that a transaction could involve either an equity investment or an asset sale. It further stated that if Tranzact entered into a transaction with any party listed on Exhibit A of the agreement, the advisors were entitled to the investment banking fee in the event that the transaction was consummated within one year of termination of the agreement. Tranzact paid the $40,000 retainer, and when the advisors indicated that they would be unable to continue the engagement unless they were paid on an hourly basis, Tranzact paid them over $60,000 in additional fees.
Tranzact terminated the agreement in July 1999. In March 2000, after providing Schneider Logistics (allegedly without the advisors’ knowledge) with a “Selling Memorandum” previously prepared by the ad-visors, Tranzact sold its Freight Payment Services Division to Schneider for $17,500,000. Because Schneider was listed on Exhibit A and because the Schneider transaction occurred within a year after termination of the agreement, the advisors determined that the investment banking fee provision was triggered despite the fact that the advisors were not directly involved in the transaction. They thus requested payment of the investment banking fee, but Tranzact contended that it was not required to pay and sought a declaratory judgment to that effect in federal district court. Tranzact also sued the advisors for breach of contract, claiming that the advisors had been derelict in their duties under the agreement. The advisors countersued, claiming that Tranzact was in breach due to its failure to pay the fee. The district court granted summary judgment to Tranzact on the advisors’ claim. It also dismissed Tranzact’s breach of contract claim against the advisors sua sponte, ruling that “based on the undisputed evidence in the record[,] the [advisors] satisfied all of [their] contractual obligations .... ” Both parties appeal.
A. The Investment Banking Fee Provision
The relevant portions of the agreement between Tranzact and the advisors are Section 3, entitled “Transaction,” and Section 4, entitled “Fees.” Section 3 contains the following language:
A Transaction shall be defined as (1) the sale or other disposition to another corporation, person or business entity (an “investor”) of all or a portion of Tran-zact’s stock or assets, (2) an equity or quasi-equity investment in Tranzact by an investor or (3) a merger, consolidation or other combination of Tranzact with an investor.
Section 4 states in part that:
The Advisors’• investment banking fees will be based on the following formula: 0.0% [of the Transaction Value] if the Enterprise Value is below $15,000,000. 0.5% if the Enterprise Value ranges from $15,000,000 to $17,499,999.
1.0% if the Enterprise Value ranges from $17,500,000 to $21,499,999.
2.0% if the Enterprise Value ranges from $21,500,000 to $24,999,999.
2.5% if the Enterprise Value ranges from $25,000,000 to $29,999,999.
3.0% if the Enterprise Value ranges from $30,000,000 to $39,999,999.
4.0% if the Enterprise Value ranges from $40,000,000 to $49,999,999.
5.0% if the Enterprise Value is $50,000,000 or above.
Enterprise Value in this context is the Total Transaction Value divided by the percentage of equity ownership held by an Investor after the Transaction. Total Transaction Value in this context refers to total consideration paid for an equity interest in Tranzact, including any seller financing, plus assumed debt (including bank indebtedness and shareholders and related party notes, but excluding trade and current payables). The fees will be applied as a percentage of the Transaction Value and will be contingent payable upon successful completion of the Transaction. Payment of these fees will be made at the time of closing of the Transaction.
The district court determined that an enforceable contract existed with respect to another portion of Section 4, which required Tranzact to pay a non-refundable $40,000 retainer “for strategic consulting, due diligence items and the completion of a descriptive memorandum.” It found, however, that although Tranzact intended to pay and the advisors intended to receive an investment banking fee upon the completion of a qualifying transaction, the terms of Section 4’s fee provision are too indefinite to be enforced. Specifically, the court pointed out that although the term Total Transaction Value is defined, the term Transaction Value is not defined, and found this omission to be fatal because the agreement clearly states that the investment banking fee is to be calculated as “a percentage of the Transaction Value.”
The district court further determined that even assuming that Transaction Value has the same meaning as Total Transaction Value, fees are not warranted when a Transaction involves a sale of assets. Rather, the fee provision is triggered when an investor obtains equity interest in Tranzact. It noted that if the fee formula were applied in this case the ad-visors would not be due any fees, because the number zero must be plugged into the equation whenever the formula requires numbers linked to equity. The court de-
“In construing a contract, the primary objective is to determine and give effect to the intentions of the parties at the time they entered into the contract.”
Ancraft Prods. Co. v. Universal Oil Prods. Co.,
1. Transaction Value
The term Transaction Value is a key component of the fee formula and is thus material to this agreement.
See Goldstick v. ICM Realty,
Thus, despite the advisors’ insistence that Transaction Value must mean Total Transaction Value, we find the term ambiguous. However, the advisors argue persuasively that if Transaction Value is ambiguous, the district court should have allowed them to provide extrinsic evidence to support their proposition that Transaction Value means Total Transaction Value rather than finding that the term’s ambiguity rendered the contract unenforceable.
4
See Pritchett v. Asbestos Claims Mgmt. Corp.,
2. The Fee Formula
Merely finding that Transaction Value and Total Transaction Value have the same meaning, however, does not change the outcome of this case. The problem that the fee provision poses for the advis-ors is that the variables in the fee formula are tied to equity. In this instance, because the Transaction involved an asset sale, zero must be plugged into the equation whenever an equity number is required, and thus no fees are due. 6
The advisors are mistaken. It is true that “Illinois courts ... apply the principle of construction that a contract must be interpreted as a whole, giving meaning and effect to each provision.”
Emergency Medical Care, Inc. v. Marion Memorial Hosp.,
The advisors are not allowed to introduce extrinsic evidence unless the contract’s terms are ambiguous, and ambiguity does not arise merely because Tranzact and the advisors cannot agree on the meaning of the fee provision.
See Pritchett,
For completeness’ sake, however, we note that even if the parties intended to provide a fee based on an asset sale and
Moreover, although the advisors point to
Wisconsin Real Estate Investment Trust v. Weinstein,
B. Tranzact’s Breach of Contract Claim
Tranzact sought a refund of all monies paid to the advisors for work conducted under the agreement. However, the district court determined sua sponte that “all contractual obligations of the parties have been satisfied under the Agreement, and no further monies or actions are due by either side.” Tranzact complains that the district court acted improperly by denying Tranzact notice and an opportunity to oppose summary judgment.
We have cautioned district courts to provide parties with notice and a fair opportunity to present evidence when they are considering entering judgment
sua sponte. See, e.g., S. Ill. Riverboat Casino Cruises, Inc. v. Triangle Insulation & Sheet Metal Co.,
Tranzact has failed to show that it has a viable claim on appeal. In its fact section, Tranzact stated only that “Defendants failed to perform all services required under the Agreement,” followed by a string-cite to the record. It also failed to flesh out the merits of the claim in the page and a half that it devoted to this issue in its argument section. 7 We therefore affirm the grant of summary judgment in the advisors’ favor.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s decision is Affiemed.
Notes
. The parties' contract dispute is governed by Illinois law.
. Although the district court acknowledged that it was required to view all facts in the advisors’ favor, it also employed the doctrine of
contra proferentem,
which dictates that ambiguous terms in a contract be construed against the drafter.
See Ancraft Prods. Co. v. Universal Oil Prods. Co.,
. The advisors also contend that a court cannot sever this contract, finding that the provision for the $40,000 retainer is enforceable, but the provision for the investment banking fee is not. We agree. Although Illinois law allows severability under certain circumstances,
see Abbott-Interfast Corp. v. Harkabus,
. The advisors do not seek a remand based on the district court’s refusal to allow extrinsic evidence. See Appellants’ Reply Brief at 5 ("In any event, Appellants have addressed the [Transaction Value] issue on appeal, and this Court can interpret 'Transaction Value' without remanding.”).
. We note that this is a questionable assumption, as the advisors give no hint as to what type of evidence they would have provided had they been given the opportunity to do so.
. This is because the key terms in the fee formula are Transaction Value, Total Transaction Value, and Enterprise Value. We explained earlier that Transaction Value is the same as Total Transaction Value for purposes of this case. Total Transaction Value is defined as “total consideration paid for an equity interest in Tranzact.” Here, no consideration was paid for an equity interest because this was an asset sale. Thus, the Transaction Value and Total Transaction Value are zero. As for Enterprise Value, this figure is arrived at by dividing Total Transaction Value by "the percentage of equity ownership held by an Investor after the Transaction.” Because this was an asset sale, the investor has no equity ownership, and we have already explained above that the Total Transaction Value is
. Moreover, our own review of the record casts no doubt on the district court's conclusion that the advisors fulfilled all of their duties as set forth in the agreement.
