ITyX Solutions AG v. Kodak Alaris, Inc. ( 2020 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 19-1658
    ITYX SOLUTIONS AG,
    Plaintiff, Counter Defendant, Appellee,
    ITYX SYSTEMWICKLUNG OHG; ITYX TECHNOLOGY GMBH; SULEYMAN ARAYAN;
    HEIKO GROFTSCHIK,
    Counter Defendants,
    v.
    KODAK ALARIS, INC.,
    Defendant, Counter Plaintiff, Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. Allison D. Burroughs, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Howard, Chief Judge,
    Lynch and Barron, Circuit Judges.
    Pieter Van Tol, with whom Garima Malhotra, Marisa H. Lenok,
    Hogan Lovells US LLP, Paul R. Mastrocola, Andrea L. Martin, and
    Burns & Levinson LLP were on brief, for appellant.
    Johnathan K. Levine, with whom Elizabeth K. Levine, Pritzker
    Levine LLP, Scott R. Magee, and Morse, Barnes-Brown & Pendleton,
    PC were on brief, for appellee.
    February 27, 2020
    LYNCH, Circuit Judge.     This appeal primarily concerns
    attacks on a verdict against Kodak Alaris, Inc. ("Kodak") based on
    the jury finding that Kodak was in breach of its contractual
    obligation to ITyX Solutions AG ("ITyX").        Judgment was entered
    against Kodak in the sum of $9,211,699.20, including prejudgment
    interest. Kodak also challenges whether ITyX had what Kodak called
    "standing" to bring a breach of contract claim, the rulings the
    district court made following the verdict, the district court's
    calculation of prejudgment interest, and the denial of Kodak's
    motion for a new trial.
    In brief, Kodak contracted with ITyX to sell ITyX's
    intelligent document recognition ("IDR") software as part of a
    Kodak-branded software.     The contract allowed either party to
    terminate the agreement following a material breach by the other
    party and also prohibited Kodak from reentering the IDR business
    within two years of Kodak's "abandon[ing] the IDR market."           The
    parties'   relationship   soon   soured,   and   Kodak   purported    to
    terminate the contract and purported to exit the IDR business.
    ITyX brought suit against Kodak for breach of contract and to
    enjoin Kodak from reentering the IDR business.       After ITyX filed
    this suit, and within two years of Kodak purporting to terminate
    the agreement, Kodak partnered with a new IDR producer to market
    and sell a new Kodak-branded IDR product.
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    The jury verdict awarded $7,466,045 in damages to ITyX.
    Kodak disputed that the verdict actually found that Kodak had
    breached     the       contract.       It   argued    that   the   jury   must      have
    necessarily found that it was ITyX which breached, and that ITyX
    had breached the covenant of good faith and fair dealing.                            The
    district court correctly rejected this argument, as well as Kodak's
    various "standing" and damages arguments. We reject all challenges
    and affirm, except as to the calculation of prejudgment interest.
    As to interest, we alter the date used and remand.
    I.
    We    describe      the    factual     background     of   the   parties'
    claims, and then turn to the procedural history of the appeal.
    A.      Factual Background
    ITyX, a German software company, produces IDR software,
    which    interprets        and     extracts    text   from    documents       and   then
    organizes such content for a user.                  ITyX is wholly owned by ITyX
    Technology,        a    German     limited    liability      company.         A   German
    partnership, ITyX OHG, owns the majority of ITyX Technology.                        ITyX
    OHG is composed of partners Süleyman Arayan and Heiko Groftschik,
    both citizens of Germany.              Arayan is also the CEO of ITyX.              Kodak
    Alaris Holdings ("KAH") wholly owns Kodak, an American company.
    1.   The Master and PS Agreements
    In 2011, ITyX began business discussions with Eastman
    Kodak Company ("EKC") and, on January 18, 2012, entered into a
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    contract called the "Master Agreement."                   Just a day later, EKC
    filed for bankruptcy.         In September 2013, Kodak assumed all of
    EKC's rights and obligations under the Master Agreement.
    The Master Agreement defines the parties' contractual
    relationship.        Its Preamble states that the parties "decided to
    enter into a strategic partnership where ITyX [would] license [the
    IDR software] to Kodak and Kodak [would] rebrand and market [such
    software]."      The Agreement defines the Kodak-branded, IDR product
    (the    "Kodak   Product")    as    "the       product,    product   family,   and
    components of products, . . . that Kodak intends to distribute to
    End Users and will include or incorporate the Licensed Software
    . . .     supplied    by   ITyX    and    as     developed   pursuant   to     this
    Agreement."
    The Master Agreement had an initial term of five years,
    and the parties believed that it would take about three years to
    bring the software to market.                  Unless terminated, the Master
    Agreement automatically renewed in two-year increments.
    The Master Agreement provides that either Kodak or ITyX
    could terminate the Master Agreement
    after a material breach by the other Party upon written
    notice to the defaulting party ("Default Notice")
    specifying the default in reasonable detail, unless the
    defaulting party cures the default within 30 days after
    receipt of the Default Notice or, if such default cannot
    be cured within such time, the defaulting Party does not
    promptly start diligently and continuously in good faith
    to cure the default.
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    ITyX warranted that it either owned the copyright of the IDR
    software or "ha[d] and [would] retain the authority to enter into
    . . . this Agreement and to grant licenses . . . to Kodak."                The
    Agreement also created various exclusivity obligations, including
    that Kodak would be the sole distributor of the Kodak Product and
    would not "develop a product functionally equivalent to the Kodak
    Product," i.e., an IDR product that would compete with ITyX's
    software.     Although the Master Agreement authorized Kodak to exit
    "in its sole good faith business judgment" the IDR business (and
    so discontinue the marketing and sale of the Kodak Product), Kodak
    could not sell an IDR product not supplied by ITyX within two years
    of the exit date.
    In the event of a breach, the Master Agreement allows,
    but does not require, the non-breaching party to seek specific
    performance from the breaching party.
    The Master Agreement provided that ITyX would "act as an
    independent contractor" of Kodak.             The Master Agreement also
    incorporates     any   "Statement[s]     of   Work"   creating    additional
    "specifications and conditions" into which Kodak and ITyX would
    enter   subsequently.       New   York    substantive    law     governs   the
    Agreement.
    On June 25, 2015, Kodak and ITyX entered into another
    contract, the Professional Services Transfer Pricing Agreement
    ("PS Agreement").      The parties then amended the PS Agreement on
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    August       20,   2015   (the   "PS    Amendment").      Together,    these   "PS
    Agreements" specified that Kodak would be solely responsible for
    sales    and       marketing,    and   ITyX   would    provide   the   technology
    necessary to deliver and support the software.
    2.     The Investment          Framework   Agreement     Among    Related
    Entities
    More than two years after Kodak and ITyX entered into
    the Master Agreement, a group of related entities, KAH, ITyX OHG,
    ITyX Technology, and Arayan entered into a June 2014 Investment
    Framework Agreement ("IFA").              Under the IFA, KAH would acquire
    25.1% of ITyX Technology. ITyX Technology, in turn, was to acquire
    ITyX and another company and KAH would invest €12.6 million into
    ITyX Technology via a series of payments over a sixteen-month
    period. The IFA also authorized ITyX Technology, once per quarter,
    to request up to two million euros in additional investment funds
    from KAH to "support . . . acquisitions or similar strategic
    investments."
    The IFA provides that if KAH failed to make a required
    payment for more than thirty days, then ITyX OHG or ITyX Technology
    could exercise a "call option."               The call option, if exercised,
    would allow ITyX OHG or ITyX Technology to purchase all ITyX
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    Technology shares held by KAH in return for a payment of one euro
    and a waiver of KAH's outstanding IFA obligations.
    3.      KAH Purports to Terminate the IFA and Kodak Purports to
    Terminate the Master Agreement
    In June 2015, KAH did not make one of its required
    payments at the required time.    In response, on November 23 or 24,
    2015, ITyX OHG gave notice to KAH that it was exercising the call
    option.   The notice stated that this decision was based on both
    the missed payment and on an earlier refusal by KAH to invest
    another two million euros into ITyX Technology pursuant the IFA.1
    On December 18, 2015, KAH sent to ITyX OHG and ITyX
    Technology a letter stating that it would not comply with the call
    option, and that it was terminating the IFA for cause and was
    withdrawing as a shareholder of ITyX Technology.      Also on December
    18, 2015, Kodak sent a letter to ITyX asserting that the exercise
    of the call option effected a material breach of the Master
    Agreement, and announced Kodak was terminating the Agreement.        The
    letter also stated that, if the termination was ineffective, Kodak
    was abandoning the IDR business for a two-year period following
    the exit date.      A jury would later find that, by selling its
    Actionable    Intelligence   Management   ("AIM")   platform,   an   IDR
    1    Kodak contends that it missed the payment inadvertently
    and, immediately upon learning of this oversight, paid the required
    amount.   The parties also dispute whether any such "strategic
    investment[]" existed. These issues do not affect the resolution
    of this appeal.
    - 8 -
    software, Kodak reentered the IDR business in violation of that
    two-year period.
    B.   Procedural History
    On February 15, 2016, ITyX filed suit against Kodak for
    damages for breach of contract and for declaratory and injunctive
    relief to the effect that the Master Agreement was still in effect
    and Kodak could not develop or sell products that competed with
    the Kodak Product. ITyX moved for a preliminary injunction against
    Kodak to prevent it from selling various IDR products.          The
    district court, finding no risk of irreparable harm, denied the
    motion.
    On April 15, 2016, Kodak moved to dismiss the action or
    stay the proceedings until two related lawsuits in Germany were
    resolved.2    The district court denied the motion, noting that it
    was not certain that parties and/or contracts in the German
    proceedings were "sufficiently aligned," or that the legal issue
    were sufficiently alike.
    On February 21, 2018, Kodak moved for summary judgment
    on all claims, arguing primarily that ITyX lacked standing to bring
    2    ITyX represented to the district court that, on March
    20, 2018, the District Court of Frankfurt am Main dismissed the
    German lawsuit. Noting an ongoing appeal of that dismissal, the
    district court did not treat the German decision as final.
    - 9 -
    the suit.3         Kodak also argued that, in terminating the Master
    Agreement on December 18, 2015, it had validly terminated the PS
    Agreements.         It argued in the alternative that the purported
    termination        of   the   Master    Agreement     started   a     twelve-month
    notification period required to terminate PS Agreements.                        The
    district court reasoned that, because the PS Agreement provided
    for a minimum duration of twenty-four months and did not expressly
    premise its duration on that of the Master Agreement, that the
    plain language of the PS Agreement did not support Kodak's argument
    and denied summary judgment.
    The parties then went to trial on November 5, 2018, and,
    on November 26, 2018, the jury reached a verdict in ITyX's favor.
    The jury made the following findings in response to special
    questions as to ITyX's breach of contract claims:               (1) The "Master
    Agreement [was] a valid contract between [Kodak] and [ITyX]"; and
    (2) Kodak did not "breach the Master Agreement and/or PS Agreements
    by terminating them on December 18, 2015."              On the other hand, the
    jury       found   against    Kodak   that:     (3)   Kodak   under    the   Master
    Agreement "reenter[ed] the IDR business represented by the Kodak
    3  Kodak also moved for partial summary judgment on various
    issues and ITyX moved for both judgment on the pleadings and
    partial summary judgment.     The district court granted summary
    judgment on one minor, undisputed issue and denied summary judgment
    and judgment on the pleadings as to the remaining issues.       For
    brevity, we elaborate on only the summary judgment issues relevant
    to the instant appeal.
    - 10 -
    IDR Product within two years of abandoning that business on
    December 18, 2015";4 (4) Kodak "breach[ed] the PS Agreements by
    not making quarterly payments due during the minimum term of those
    agreements from January 1, 2016 through at least June 1, 2017";
    (5) Kodak's "breach of its contractual obligations [was not]
    excused"; and (6) ITyX had "been damaged as a result of [Kodak's]
    breach of its contractual obligations" and that $7,466,045 would
    "fairly compensate ITyX . . . for its damages for [Kodak's] breach
    of its contractual obligations."   The parties agree that this sum
    in the verdict was the result of the addition of $872,529 in
    damages for the breach of the Master Agreement and $6,593,516 in
    damages for missed payments under the PS Agreements.
    As to Kodak's breach of contract counterclaim, the jury
    found that ITyX did not "breach the Master Agreement, the PS
    Agreements, and/or the Statements of Work by failing to comply
    with the terms of those agreements."   The jury also found that no
    fiduciary relationship existed between Kodak and ITyX.    The jury
    rejected both of Kodak's tortious interference claims and awarded
    no damages to Kodak on any of its claims.
    4    Because of the agreed-on verdict form, the jury did not
    answer whether this violation of an explicit term of the Master
    Agreement was a breach, but the district court found this violation
    was a breach, ITyX Solutions, AG v. Kodak Alaris Inc., No. 16-cv-
    10250-ADB, 
    2019 WL 1005497
    , at *4-5 (Mar. 1, 2019), and that
    finding is supported by the sum of the jury's award, which included
    sums for this breach.
    - 11 -
    On March 1, 2019, the district court ruled on the
    parties'     claims   for    declaratory      judgment    and     an   injunction
    preventing Kodak from reentering the IDR business.                     The court
    issued declaratory judgments that Kodak did not properly terminate
    the Master or PS Agreements on December 18, 2015, and Kodak
    materially    breached      the   Master   Agreement's     Exit    Provision   by
    reentering the IDR business by marketing the AIM platform. Finding
    that, following Kodak's breach, ITyX elected to terminate the
    Agreements and seek damages, the court held that the Agreements no
    longer bound both parties. Accordingly, the court denied the claim
    for injunctive relief as moot.        On the same day, the district court
    entered final judgment in favor of ITyX.                 In its judgment, the
    court awarded $1,745,654.20 in prejudgment interest and post-
    judgment interest at the rate of 2.55% on the total damages award.
    On March 25, 2018, Kodak moved for judgment as a matter
    of law, or a new trial and/or amendment to the district court's
    March 1 order.    Kodak raised what it called its standing argument
    from its summary judgment motion.             As to its motion for judgment
    as a matter of law, Kodak also argued that Kodak did not breach
    any contract, ITyX breached the covenant of good faith and fair
    dealing, and that the jury verdict supports this.                 As a fallback
    argument, Kodak argued that the evidence was insufficient to
    support the jury verdict that ITyX proved its claims of breach or
    of the amount of damages.          Turning to its motion for a new trial
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    on the merits (or, in the alternative, on damages), Kodak presented
    the same arguments outlined above as well as arguments that the
    verdict form confused the jurors and ITyX's counsel committed trial
    misconduct.        The district court rejected Kodak's arguments and
    denied the motion.      This appeal followed.
    II.
    We review questions of law, including the issue of
    standing, de novo.       Katz v. Pershing, LLC, 
    672 F.3d 64
    , 70 (1st
    Cir. 2012) (quoting Me. People's All. & Nat. Res. Def. Council v.
    Mallinckrodt, Inc., 
    471 F.3d 277
    , 283 (1st Cir. 2006)).             A denial
    of judgment as a matter of law is also reviewed de novo, but
    applying the same standard as the district court.             That is, we
    examine all evidence "in the light most favorable to the nonmoving
    party, drawing all possible inferences in its favor. . . . We do
    not consider the credibility of witnesses, resolve conflicts in
    testimony, or evaluate the weight of the evidence."            CPC Int'l,
    Inc. v. Northbrook Excess & Surplus Ins. Co., 
    144 F.3d 35
    , 42 (1st
    Cir. 1998) (internal citations omitted).           We do not disturb the
    jury verdict if, "viewing the evidence in the light most favorable
    to the verdict, a rational jury could find in favor of the party
    who prevailed."       Gillespie v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 
    386 F.3d 21
    ,
    25   (1st   Cir.    2004).   The   determination    under   state    law   of
    prejudgment interest is also reviewed de novo.              See Tobin v.
    Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 
    553 F.3d 121
    , 145–46 (1st Cir. 2009) (citing
    - 13 -
    R.I. Charities Tr. v. Engelhard Corp., 
    267 F.3d 3
    , 5 (1st Cir.
    2001)).
    The denials of the motion for a new trial and to amend
    findings and/or the judgment are reviewed for abuse of discretion.
    Cantellops v. Alvaro-Chapel, 
    234 F.3d 741
    , 744 (1st Cir. 2000);
    Nat'l Metal Finishing Co. v. BarclaysAmerican/Commercial, Inc.,
    
    899 F.2d 119
    , 125 (1st Cir. 1990).
    A.   Kodak's Attacks on District Court Rulings
    1.     Kodak's Argument that ITyX Lacked Standing to Bring the
    Suit Is Meritless
    Kodak    argues    that    ITyX    does   not    have   Article   III
    standing, and so the district court erred by not granting summary
    judgment or judgment as a matter of law in Kodak's favor, and erred
    by deferring its decision on standing until after the jury decided
    material, disputed facts about the meaning of the contract.                Kodak
    argues that ITyX did not own or have the distribution rights to
    the IDR software and so could not grant a license to Kodak, as
    required by the Warranty of Title section in the Master Agreement.
    In consequence, Kodak contends, ITyX could not enforce the Master
    Agreement   and     so,   in   its   view,    it   follows   that   ITyX   lacked
    standing.   Kodak is wrong for several reasons.
    Standing      requires    that     a   plaintiff   satisfy     "three
    elements:     injury in fact, traceability, and redressability."
    - 14 -
    Kerin v. Titeflex Corp., 
    770 F.3d 978
    , 981 (1st Cir. 2014) (citing
    Lujan v. Defs. of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    , 560–61 (1992)).
    ITyX's complaint alleged the existence of             contracts to
    which it was a party, and a concomitant breach, and damages.               ITyX
    was a party to the contract.        That Kodak defends, on the grounds
    that it believed ITyX breached the Warranty provision and that the
    contract did not afford ITyX a right to enforce it, does not create
    an issue of Article III standing.           Kodak does not cite any cases
    that a defense that a party to a contract has violated a provision
    of that contract precludes Article III standing.
    The   only    standing    cases     Kodak     cites   involve    very
    different facts, in which non-parties sought to sue on contracts
    as third-party beneficiaries.       See Miree v. DeKalb Cty., 433 U.S
    25, 29 (1977) ("The relevant inquiry is a narrow one:                whether
    petitioners as third-party beneficiaries of the contracts have
    standing to sue respondent."); AT&T Mobility, LLC v. Nat'l Ass'n
    for Stock Car Auto Racing, Inc., 
    494 F.3d 1356
    , 1359–61 (11th Cir.
    2007) (deciding whether a "non-party" had suffered an injury in
    fact by looking to whether it had a "legally protected interest"
    that was invaded).     ITyX is not a non-party.
    Traceability     requires    "'a     causal    connection'      . . .
    between the injury and the challenged conduct."            Belsito Commc'ns,
    Inc. v. Decker, 
    845 F.3d 13
    , 21 (1st Cir. 2016) (quoting 
    Lujan, 504 U.S. at 560
    –61)).      Here, the evidence adequately supported
    - 15 -
    ITyX's allegation that Kodak discontinued contractual payments and
    reentered the IDR market which caused ITyX financial injury.
    Redressability requires "that the injury will likely be redressed
    by a favorable decision."          
    Id. (alteration and
    quotation marks
    omitted) (quoting 
    Lujan, 504 U.S. at 560
    –61)).                  Money damages
    redress the economic injury ITyX alleged, and so this prong is
    met.    See 24 Richard A. Lord, Williston on Contracts § 64:1 (4th
    ed. 2019) ("The primary if not the only remedy for injuries caused
    by the nonperformance of most contracts is an action for damages
    for the breach . . . .").         ITyX plainly had Article III standing
    to bring this suit.
    2.   We Reject Kodak's Appellate         Arguments       About    the    PS
    Agreements' Minimum Duration
    Kodak argues that the district court also erred in
    holding "that the PS Agreements remained in effect for two years
    after inception," that is, until at least June 1, 2017.                       This
    argument is both waived and meritless.
    In its Rule 50(a) motion, Kodak did not object to the
    district    court's     summary    judgment   conclusion        that    the    PS
    Agreements had a minimum term of twenty-four months.                   Kodak has
    waived this argument.      At most, Kodak made the different argument
    that ITyX could not show damages and no damages existed.                      That
    different   argument     concerned    the   sufficiency    of    evidence      of
    damages,    not   the   district   court's    interpretation      of     the   PS
    - 16 -
    Agreement.     See Ji v. Bose Corp., 
    626 F.3d 116
    , 127-28 (1st Cir.
    2010).
    Even   assuming    dubitante    that   Kodak      preserved    this
    argument, the argument still fails.          The PS Agreements remained in
    effect until at least June 1, 2017.          The PS Agreements state that
    "[t]he [PS] [A]greement has a minimum term of 24 months and is
    automatically renewable for another year unless a cancellation
    notice is given."       The cancellation language on which Kodak's
    argument turns does not alter the contracts' plain language as to
    the minimum term.
    B.    Kodak's Attacks on the Jury Verdict and Denial of Judgment as
    a Matter of Law
    To prove a breach of contract claim under New York law,
    a party must show:     "[1] formation of a contract, [2] performance
    by one party, [3] failure to perform by another, and [4] resulting
    damage."      N.Y. State Workers' Comp. Bd. v. SGRisk, LLC, 
    983 N.Y.S.2d 642
    , 648 (App. Div. 2014).          Kodak contends that ITyX did
    not   sufficiently    show     breach   under   either   the    Master     or   PS
    Agreements and that the jury verdict is inconsistent.
    1.     Kodak Misunderstands the Jury's Findings of Breach of
    Contract as to the Master Agreement
    Kodak argues that the district court erred in denying
    its motion for judgment as a matter of law because Kodak reads the
    jury finding that Kodak did not breach "by terminating [the Master
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    and/or PS Agreements] on December 18, 2015" to mean that Kodak
    validly terminated the Agreements in December 2015.5
    First, this argument is forfeited, as Kodak "did not
    raise       a   claim   of    inconsistency    before    the   [district]    court
    discharged the jury."             Correia v. Fitzgerald, 
    354 F.3d 47
    , 56–57
    (1st Cir. 2003).
    Second, Kodak's argument, even if preserved, reads too
    much into this finding.              This jury finding non-breach in this
    respect does not contradict the jury finding that Kodak breached
    by a different action and/or on some other date.                 The jury found
    that Kodak had reentered the IDR business within two years of
    purporting to abandon the business and that Kodak had breached the
    PS Agreements.          Such reentry is a different breach of the Master
    Agreement.        The jury then awarded damages to ITyX (and no damages
    to Kodak).         "Where there is a view of the case that makes the
    jury's answers to special interrogatories consistent, they must be
    resolved that way."           Atlantic & Gulf Stevedores, Inc. v. Ellerman
    Lines, Ltd., 
    369 U.S. 355
    , 364 (1962).                  Here, that view is that
    Kodak, through reentry within two years, breached the Master
    Agreement, Kodak breached the PS Agreements, and ITyX did not
    breach      the   terms      of   these   Agreements,    including   the   implied
    5 We do not address Kodak's arguments that are premised on
    the notion that the jury found it had breached the Master Agreement
    by terminating the contract. The jury found that Kodak did not so
    breach the Master Agreement.
    - 18 -
    covenant of good faith and fair dealing.           The jury's findings are
    internally    consistent,    and   sufficient      evidence   supports    its
    finding that Kodak breached the Master Agreement and PS Agreements,
    but did not do so by purporting to terminate the Agreements on
    December 18, 2015.
    Next, Kodak argues both that the damages awarded were
    "speculative and lacked evidentiary support."          Both arguments lack
    merit.
    As to its "speculative" damages argument, Kodak asserts
    that ITyX improperly calculated damages by factoring in the sales
    figures of products they argue were irrelevant, and the jury
    impermissibly     relied    on   these   product    calculations.        ITyX
    presented evidence of its calculation of its damages under the
    Master Agreement as forty percent of Kodak's AIM Platform sales.
    The evidence was that the AIM Platform sales were a reasonable
    proxy for the sales the Kodak Product would have accrued but for
    Kodak's breach, of which forty percent belonged to ITyX under the
    Master Agreement.    Kodak's argument takes two forms:         (1) that the
    jury could rely only on figures related to the Kodak Product's
    sales; and (2) that the AIM Platform figures include the sales of
    products the district court had held not to compete with the Kodak
    Product.
    Kodak's first argument, that the jury could not rely on
    the sales figures of the AIM platform, misreads the applicable
    - 19 -
    law. Kodak relies on the rule that "[d]amages awarded for a breach
    of contract must be 'specific to those goods for which the parties
    had contracted.'"      Mongiello's Italian Cheese Specialties, Inc. v.
    Euro Foods Inc., No. 14-cv-2902 (DF), 
    2018 WL 4278284
    , at *46
    (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 30, 2018) (quoting David v. Glemby Co., 
    717 F. Supp. 162
    , 170 (S.D.N.Y. 1989)).           Because the jury awarded damages for
    the Kodak Product revenues ITyX lost as a result of the breach,
    and not for some other ITyX product, the award complied with the
    rule.
    Next, Kodak argues that the AIM Platform sales figures
    comprised revenues from products that would not compete with the
    Kodak Product and that the AIM Platform was not analogous to the
    Kodak Product because it was sold to "different customers, in a
    different market, in a different geographic area, and under a
    different price structure."          Nothing compelled the jury to accept
    this view or to reach a different damages sum.
    Under New York law, "the non-breaching party need only
    provide   a    'stable      foundation    for   a   reasonable    estimate     [of
    damages]'     before   an    award   of   general    damages     can   be   made."
    Tractebel Energy Mktg., Inc. v. AEP Power Mktg., Inc., 
    487 F.3d 89
    , 110–11 (2d Cir. 2007) (alteration in original) (quoting Freund
    v. Wash. Square Press, Inc., 
    314 N.E.2d 419
    , 421 (N.Y. 1974)).
    Here, ITyX did just that by providing the sales figures of the
    product that Kodak marketed in place of ITyX's.                  That Kodak can
    - 20 -
    point to factors which tend to show that the estimate was too high
    (just as ITyX can point to factors suggesting it was too low) does
    not violate New York's "stable foundation" rule.    Under New York
    law, only the existence, not the amount, of general damages must
    be "reasonably certain" to prove a breach of contract claim.   
    Id. at 110
    (quoting Wakeman v. Wheeler & Wilson Mfg. Co., 
    4 N.E. 264
    ,
    266 (N.Y. 1886)).
    2.    Kodak's Attack Fails as to the Jury's Finding of Breach
    of Contract as to the PS Agreements
    Kodak first argues that, following Kodak's December 2015
    purported termination, ITyX failed to perform its contractual
    obligations under the PS Agreements and so could not prove it had
    met the performance element.    Specifically, Kodak contends that
    ITyX stopped identifying which employees provided services related
    to the Kodak Product, issuing relevant invoices, and refunding
    from each invoice the amount allocated to employees on Kodak's
    payroll.   These actions, Kodak argues, were conditions precedent
    to Kodak making quarterly payments under the PS Agreements.     In
    response, ITyX argues the PS Agreement obliged it to maintain
    capacity and, by doing so, ITyX performed.   This was a matter for
    the jury to resolve.
    The jury heard testimony and saw evidence supporting
    both Kodak's and ITyX's arguments as to such performance and the
    alleged breach of the PS Agreements.     The jury expressly found
    - 21 -
    that Kodak breached the PS Agreements by not making these payments
    and that ITyX had not breached the PS Agreements.          The jury had an
    adequate evidentiary basis for its verdict and its verdict was
    rational.6
    Kodak next argues that ITyX failed to prove damages
    incurred by any alleged breach of the PS Agreement.          This too was
    an issue for the jury, and its conclusion is both supported and
    rational.     ITyX provided witness testimony about the manner of
    calculating    its   costs   of   maintaining   capacity    under   the   PS
    Agreements, and explaining the PS Agreements, which provide a table
    of the quarterly payments Kodak was obligated to make.              Kodak's
    argument fails.7
    6    While we have addressed Kodak's argument on the merits,
    Kodak seems to have waived this performance argument by not raising
    it in its Rule 50(a) motion. Kodak argued that, because "there[]
    [was] no list of the people who were on the ITyX Solutions payroll
    who [were] doing any work[,] . . . [ITyX] [could not] prove
    damages."    This preserves Kodak's argument as to the damages
    element, but not as to the performance element, i.e., ITyX's
    purported non-performance of the PS Agreements.
    7    Employing the same arguments, Kodak appeals the district
    court's denial of Kodak's motion to amend the district court's
    declaratory judgments to hold that the Master Agreement was
    terminated on December 18, 2015, and so Kodak did not breach any
    contract.   The declaratory judgments are consistent with, and
    nearly identical to, the jury verdict. The district court clearly
    did not abuse its discretion.
    - 22 -
    3.   Prejudgment Interest on the Damages Under the Master
    Agreement Should Be Computed from January 1, 2017
    The district court calculated a prejudgment interest
    award of $1,745,654.20 at the New York prescribed rate of nine
    percent.    See N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 5004; see also Analysis Grp., Inc.
    v. Cent. Fla. Invs., Inc., 
    629 F.3d 18
    , 24 (1st Cir. 2010) (stating
    that substantive state law governs the prejudgment interest award
    in    diversity   actions).    The   district   court    calculated   the
    prejudgment interest on the $872,529 in damages awarded for breach
    of the Master Agreement from the date the complaint was filed.8
    Kodak appeals only the date used for computation of damages under
    the Master Agreement.
    Under New York Law,
    [t]he date from which interest is to be computed shall
    be specified in the verdict, report or decision. If a
    jury is discharged without specifying the date, the
    court upon motion shall fix the date, except that where
    the date is certain and not in dispute, the date may be
    fixed by the clerk of the court upon affidavit.       The
    amount of interest shall be computed by the clerk of the
    court, to the date the verdict was rendered or the report
    or decision was made, and included in the total sum
    awarded.
    N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 5001(c).      Because the jury did not fix the date,
    the district court was thus authorized on motion to fix the date.
    
    Id. The parties
    offered two potential dates:         Kodak argued for
    8  The district court calculated the prejudgment interest
    on the separate breach of the PS Agreement from the date each
    missed payment was due.
    - 23 -
    January 1, 2017, the beginning of the first year of AIM Platform
    sales.       ITyX argued for the date of the filing of the complaint,
    February 15, 2016.       The district court chose the earlier date of
    filing, but gave no statement of reasons.
    Under New York law, the date chosen depends on there
    being both a breach and damages.           See N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 5001(b)
    ("Interest shall be computed from the earliest ascertainable date
    the cause of action existed, except that interest upon damages
    incurred thereafter shall be computed from the date incurred.");
    N.Y. State       Workers' Comp. 
    Bd., 983 N.Y.S.2d at 648
    (discussing
    the elements for contract breach cause of action); see also Gelco
    Builders & Burjay Contr. Corp. v. Simpson Factors Corp., 
    301 N.Y.S.2d 728
    , 730-31 (Sup. Ct. 1969) (requiring proof of damages
    on the date from which prejudgment interest runs).            The jury
    verdict here, for breach of the Master Agreement, awarded damages
    equivalent to the licensing fees owed for the breach. Kodak argues
    that, because such damages were for license fees, the proper date
    for the running of interest is January 1, 2017, as Kodak did not
    make any new sales for which it would have owed fees before this
    date.       We think Kodak's position is the correct one under New York
    law, for the reasons stated above.9
    9 Kodak did not argue that the damages occurred at various
    times and so should be computed "from a single reasonable
    intermediate date." N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 5001(b).
    - 24 -
    We vacate the award of prejudgment interest on the
    $872,529 in damages under the Master Agreement, and remand with
    instructions to calculate prejudgment interest from January 1,
    2017.
    C.   The District Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Denying
    Kodak's Motion for a New Trial
    Kodak presents three arguments that the district court
    abused its discretion in denying Kodak's motion for a new trial:
    (1) the verdict was against the great weight of the evidence; (2)
    the verdict form confused the jury; and (3) misconduct by ITyX's
    trial counsel tainted the proceedings.   We address each argument
    in turn.
    The verdict was most certainly not against the great
    weight of the evidence, nor was the verdict an injustice to Kodak.
    Although the district court has a much "broader" power to grant
    new trial than judgment as a matter of law, it "'cannot displace
    a jury's verdict merely because [it] disagrees with it' or because
    'a contrary verdict may have been equally . . . supportable.'"
    Jennings v. Jones, 
    587 F.3d 430
    , 436 (1st Cir. 2009) (second
    alteration in original) (quoting Ahern v. Scholz, 
    85 F.3d 774
    , 780
    (1st Cir. 1996)).   A district court may "independently weigh the
    evidence," but can only order a new trial when the verdict is
    against the weight of the evidence or when a new trial is necessary
    to prevent injustice.   
    Id. Kodak here
    offers substantially the
    - 25 -
    same arguments we have already rejected and so we cannot say there
    was any abuse of discretion.
    Next, Kodak argues that the verdict form confused the
    jury, rehashing its argument that the jury must have been confused
    because it found that Kodak did not breach the Master Agreement
    but    nonetheless      assessed    damages    for   that   breach.      At    oral
    argument, Kodak offered a new variation of its jury confusion
    argument:     that the district court and parties agreed that, if the
    jury found that Kodak did not breach "by terminating [the Master
    and/or PS Agreements] on December 18, 2015," then Kodak validly
    terminated the Master Agreement on that date, so the Exit Provision
    would no longer have any force.
    We earlier rejected these inconsistency arguments as
    forfeited under 
    Correia, 354 F.3d at 56
    –57, and meritless under
    Atlantic & Gulf Stevedores, 
    Inc., 369 U.S. at 364
    , and do so again
    here    in   response    to   the   argument.        Moreover,   Kodak   did    not
    sufficiently develop the latter jury confusion argument on appeal,
    and so it is doubly waived.10          United States v. Zannino, 
    895 F.2d 1
    , 17 (1st Cir. 1990).         To the extent this is a belated attack on
    the verdict form or the jury instructions, the arguments are
    10 In its appellate briefing, Kodak merely states its view
    that the parties and district court had agreed in a colloquy
    outside the presence of the jury that "an answer in the negative
    to Question 2 meant that the Master Agreement was validly
    terminated and the Exit Provision ceased to have effect."
    - 26 -
    waived.    Kodak objected to neither.         See Kavanaugh v. Greenlee
    Tool Co., 
    944 F.2d 7
    , 11 (1st Cir. 1991); Moore v. Murphy, 
    47 F.3d 8
    , 11 (1st Cir. 1995).
    Finally,   Kodak   argues   that    purported   misconduct   by
    ITyX's counsel "tainted the proceedings" and warrants a new trial.
    The purported misconduct, as Kodak would have it, is that the
    plaintiff's counsel made efforts to portray ITyX as David against
    Kodak as Goliath.     Counsel for ITyX referenced the relative sizes
    of the parties on two occasions:         (1) it elicited testimony on
    Kodak's revenues; and (2) ITyX, in its closing, characterized Kodak
    as a "large company taking advantage of a smaller company."         Even
    if these comments were inappropriate, and we do not say they were,
    the court's instructions clearly offset any such suggestions,
    stating:
    You should consider and decide this case as a dispute
    between persons of equal standing in the community, of
    equal worth, and holding the same or similar stations in
    life. A corporation is entitled to [a] . . . fair trial
    . . . regardless of its absolute size or its size
    relative to any other party in the case.
    And nothing in the jury's verdict leads even to a suspicion that
    the jury ignored this instruction.     See Río Mar Assocs., LP, SE v.
    UHS of P.R., Inc., 
    522 F.3d 159
    , 163 (1st Cir. 2008) ("[J]urors
    are presumed to follow the trial court's instructions.").
    There was nothing unfair or inappropriate as to the
    jury's verdict or the district court's rulings.
    - 27 -
    III.
    We affirm the rulings of the district court in all
    respects except its award of prejudgment interest on damages under
    the Master Agreement.   As to that prejudgment interest award, we
    vacate and remand with instructions to recalculate that interest
    from the date of January 1, 2017.     Costs   are   awarded   to   ITyX
    Solutions AG.
    - 28 -