We find that the resolution of this case, which involves a claim of tortious interference with an existing contract, turns on a question of New York law that is undecided: whether a generalized economic interest in soliciting business for profit can constitute a defense to a claim of tortious interference with an existing contract for an alleged tortfeasor with no previous economic relationship with the breaching party. We therefore certify this question to the New York Court of Appeals.
I. BACKGROUND
Except as noted, the facts are undisputed. White Plains Coat & Apron Co., Inc. (“WPL”), based in Peekskill, New York, rents napkins, tablecloths, and other laundered articles to bars, restaurants, and other businesses. WPL executes signed contracts with the majority of its customers. In these form contracts, a WPL customer typically “agrees to rent from [WPL] exclusively during the term of [the] Agreement, all of Customer’s requirements for laundered articles.” Generally, in exchange for a five-year exclusive contract, WPL commits (either in writing or orally) to provide customers with services on a daily, weekly or monthly basis.
Cintas Corp. and Cintas Corp. 2 (collectively “Cintas”) are based in Ohio and have local offices throughout the United States. Cintas primarily rents articles such as uniforms, linens, and mats and provides items such as hand soaps and paper towels. WPL claims that Cintas intentionally induced dozens of WPL customers to breach
Specifically, WPL contends that Cintas trained its sales representatives “to convince WPL’s customers to abandon prematurely their binding, enforceable agreements with WPL.” WPL further claims that “Cintas induced dozens of WPL customers to breach their agreements with WPL and enter into rental agreements with Cintas ... [It] signed up WPL customers even though customers informed Cintas that they had valid agreements with WPL.” Shortly after WPL discovered what Cintas purportedly had done, it wrote Cintas demanding that it “cease [its] practice of soliciting customers with whom we have contractual agreements and immediately discontinue servicing those of our customers to whom you are delivering laundered items in violation of our exclusive agreements.” The letter included a list of customers whom Cintas had allegedly improperly solicited.
In response, Cintas visited many of the customers identified in the letter and inquired whether its representatives had induced them to breach contractual commitments with WPL. Cintas then requested that the customers initial and date a written certification (previously included in the Cintas agreements) which stated that Cin-tas had not infringed existing contracts with any other rental service provider. Some, but not all, of the customers WPL had listed complied with the request.
WPL then sued Cintas for tortious interference with existing customer contracts and on other claims not relevant to this appeal. At the close of discovery, Cintas moved for summary judgment, arguing that it had no knowledge of the agreements with WPL and that it had not induced any breaches. The United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Charles L. Brieant, Judge) granted Cintas’s summary judgment motion. In the court’s oral decision, it reasoned that, assuming Cintas had interfered with its competitor’s contractual relationships, it had “a legitimate economic interest as a competitor to go sell or rent the linens.” Thus the district court determined that the economic interest defense was triggered, and to defeat it, WPL was required to show, but did not show, malice or illegality.
Under this defense, where a third party has an “economic interest” in an entity and interferes with an existing contractual relationship between the plaintiff and that entity, such interference is considered privileged and the plaintiff must show malice or illegality in order to establish a tortious interference claim.
See Foster v. Churchill,
WPL then filed a motion for reconsideration arguing that the economic interest defense did not apply because Cintas had no existing economic relationship with any of its customers and that Cintas’s interest was, at best, only a general economic interest that did not support a defense to the tort. The district court denied WPL’s motion, finding that the tortious interference defense is not limited to defendants with an “ownership interest in the breaching party.” This appeal followed.
As a preliminary matter, although it is undisputed that jurisdiction is predicated on diversity of citizenship, the parties disagree as to which state’s laws apply.
See Fin. One Pub. Co. Ltd. v. Lehman Bros. Special Fin. Inc.,
Here, a choice of law analysis is necessary because the elements of tortious interference with contract in the relevant states differ. New Jersey and Connecticut require proof that the defendant acted maliciously, while New York only requires proof of malice if the economic interest defense has been triggered.
See Daley v. Aetna Life & Cas. Co.,
New York courts have adopted a flexible choice of law approach and “seek to apply the law of the jurisdiction with the most significant interest in, or relationship to, the dispute.”
Lazard Freres & Co. v. Protective Life Ins. Co.,
Here, twenty-eight of the thirty-five customers involved are located in New York and are served by one of two Cintas offices in New York. Four customers are located in, and serviced from, Connecticut; and three are located in, and serviced from, New Jersey. The contracts that were allegedly interfered with were governed by New York law. But more importantly, because the alleged tort substantially occurred in New York, where the vast majority of the customers are located, and because the vast majority of the alleged harm occurred in New York (as WPL is a New York company headquartered in New York), we conclude that New York has the greatest interest in regulating the conduct in question and that the district court was correct to apply New York law.
See Cur-
While the “New York Court of Appeals has held that ‘there is no reason why all issues arising out of a tort claim must be resolved by reference to the law of the same jurisdiction,’ ”
Lazard Freres & Co.,
“Where an [ ]unsettled and significant question of state law ... will control the outcome of [the] case, ... we may certify that question to the New York Court of Appeals.”
Krohn v. N.Y. City Police Dep't,
In determining whether to certify we consider “the absence of authoritative state court interpretations, ... the importance of the issue to the state and the likelihood that the question will recur, and the capacity of certification to resolve the litigation.”
Green v. Montgomery,
A. Tortious Interference Under New York Law .
Tortious interference with an existing contract is a commonly pled tort. The New York Court of Appeals reviewed the tort’s basic elements in
Israel v. Wood Dolson Co.,
As the New York Court of Appeals has noted, the contours of the tort under New York law are uncertain.
See Guard-Life Corp. v. S. Parker Hardware Mfg. Corp.,
The New York Court of Appeals carved out an important defense to the tort — the economic interest defense: “[Pjrocuring the breach of a contract in the exercise of equal or superior right is acting with just cause or excuse and is justification for what would otherwise be an actionable wrong.’ ”
Foster,
Consequently, courts have applied the defense in an inconsistent manner. At one end of the spectrum, it is clear that a concrete, pre-existing economic interest such as a high level of stock ownership will support a defense to the tort.
See Foster,
Whether a general business interest in luring customers from a competitor is sufficient to trigger the economic interest defense is an important, recurring issue that potentially touches a wide range of commercial behavior. The tort protects contracts from interference, but also has the potential to restrain business competition if applied too loosely. In addition, it is unclear how the law applies to contracts that are terminable at will, terminable on some notice, or terminable only when stipulated conditions may have been met. The issue is dispositive in this case, and, we believe the answer is not clear from New York’s case law.
The district courts have embraced varying interpretations of this tort under New York law. One court has ruled that the defense simply means, “at most, that a corporate parent is privileged to interfere with the contractual relationships of its subsidiaries.”
Conocophillips v. 261 E. Merrick Rd. Corp.,
As we have noted, while the elements of the tort and the consequences of triggering the economic interest defense are relatively clear, the type of economic interest
As stated above, New York cases have made clear that a concrete, preexisting interest such as an existing equity interest is sufficient. In 1948, a New York court stated that “[o]ne who has a financial interest in the business of another possesses a privilege to interfere with the contract between the other and someone else if his purpose is to protect his own interests and if he does not employ improper means (§ 769, Restatement of Law of Torts).”
Morrison v. Frank,
Some cases illustrate conduct that might supply the justification. For example, in
Foster,
the defendants held a majority equity interest in the company and the court found that they “were clearly acting in the economic interest of [the company], which was on the brink of insolvency. To the extent that [defendants] acted to preserve the financial health of an ailing [company], their actions were economically justified.”
The district court assumed
arguendo,
for the purpose of considering defendant’s motion for summary judgment, that plaintiff presented sufficient evidence to prove the required elements of the tort.
See
Trial Tr. at 13.
See also Foster,
B. Plaintiffs Claims on Appeal
The district court found that Cintas’s interest to “solicit business and make profit” constituted the requisite interest to trigger the defense. The court reasoned that the plaintiffs claim for tortious interference necessarily failed because “the defendant had a legitimate economic interest as a competitor to go sell or rent the linens.” The court stated that “the only answer that a competitor has is to go out and do it also to the other guy.” The district court concluded that it did not “believe that the defense is available only to those defendants in tortious interference cases whose economic interest is limited to an ownership interest in the breaching party.” 1
WPL contends that the district court erroneously construed New York law as providing that interference with a contract may be justified where (a) the interference was motivated by a “general economic interest of a company to solicit business and make a profit,” and (b) plaintiff has not demonstrated that these acts of interference involved malice or other unlawful conduct. WPL contends that the “existing economic interest” defense under New York law is a narrow one that applies only when a “defendant has some pre-existing economic relationship with the breaching party” — a circumstance not present in this case. Br. of Pl.-Appellant at 9. WPL argues that the rule fashioned by the district court “would work a fundamental change in the law of New York by eviscerating the well-established distinction between the tort of interfering with existing contracts on the one hand, and interfering with prospective contract rights.” Id. at 10 (emphasis added).
Where, as here, an important legal issue remains unsettled as a matter of state law, certification is appropriate.
See Green,
CONCLUSION
Pursuant to Second Circuit Local Rule § 0.27 and New York Court of Appeals Rule § 500.17, we certify the question below to the New York Court of Appeals which may, of course, reformulate or expand upon this question as it wishes.
CERTIFICATE
The following question is hereby certified to the New York Court of Appeals pursuant to Second Circuit Local Rule § 0.27 and 22 N.Y. C.R.R. § 500.17, as ordered by the Court of Appeals of the Second Circuit:
Does a generalized economic interest in soliciting business for profit constitute a defense to a claim of tortious interference with an existing contract for an alleged tortfeasor with no previous economic relationship with the breaching party?
Notes
. The district court relied for authority on a summary order of this Court, see
Don King Prods., Inc. v. Smith,
