Gibson Foundation, Inc. v. Norris ( 2023 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 22-1837
    GIBSON FOUNDATION, INC.,
    Plaintiff, Appellant,
    v.
    ROB NORRIS; PIANO MILL GROUP, LLC,
    Defendants, Appellees.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. Indira Talwani, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Barron, Chief Judge,
    Lynch and Howard, Circuit Judges.
    Kurt Schuettinger, with whom Andrea Bates, Bates & Bates LLC,
    Steven D. Howen, and Law Offices of Steven Howen, were on brief,
    for appellant.
    Daniel J. Gibson, with whom SKB, Attorneys was on brief, for
    appellees.
    December 4, 2023
    BARRON, Chief Judge.       This case involves a rhinestone-
    adorned piano, the now-deceased entertainer Liberace, a massive
    snowstorm, and a collapsed roof.            But the appeal that is before us
    turns      on   something     far   less   dramatic:      the   ins    and   outs   of
    Massachusetts bailment and contract law. For the reasons set forth
    below, we conclude that this body of law requires that we reverse
    the grant of summary judgment to the defendants on the plaintiff's
    claims that concern the piano but affirm the denial of summary
    judgment to the plaintiff on those same claims.
    I.
    The   plaintiff     is   Gibson       Foundation,     Inc.   ("Gibson
    Foundation"), which is based in Nashville, Tennessee, and is the
    charitable arm of Gibson Brands, Inc. ("Gibson Brands").1                      Gibson
    Brands sells several lines of musical instruments and accessories,
    including a line of pianos that Baldwin Piano & Organ Company
    ("Baldwin") manufactures.
    Baldwin is an American piano manufacturer that has been
    a subsidiary of Gibson Brands since 2001. That year, Baldwin filed
    for bankruptcy and was subsequently purchased by General Electric
    Capital Corp. ("GE").             GE then assigned its rights, title, and
    interest in the asset purchase agreement to Gibson Piano Ventures,
    Inc.       ("Gibson   Piano    Ventures")       and    designated     Gibson   Piano
    Unless otherwise specified, the facts set forth are not in
    1
    dispute.
    - 2 -
    Ventures as the buyer of Baldwin and "substantially all" its
    assets.2
    The defendants are Rob Norris and The Piano Mill Group,
    LLC ("Piano Mill").   Norris owns and operates Piano Mill, which is
    based in Gloucester, Massachusetts, and sells pianos on a retail
    basis, services pianos, and offers a location for piano lessons.
    At all relevant times, Norris and Piano Mill were authorized retail
    sellers of Baldwin pianos.
    Gibson Foundation filed suit against Norris and Piano
    Mill on December 16, 2019, in the United States District Court for
    the   Middle   District   of   Tennessee,   based   on   diversity   of
    citizenship.   See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    .     The complaint alleged claims
    under Tennessee law for breach of contract, breach of bailment,
    and conversion.   The complaint alleged that Norris and Piano Mill
    had breached a warehousing agreement and bailment with Gibson
    Foundation when they refused to return to Gibson Foundation -- upon
    Gibson Foundation's request -- a piano that Liberace had used in
    his performances.3
    The Tennessee district court concluded that there was no
    personal jurisdiction over Norris and Piano Mill and that venue
    2The record contains no evidence explaining the relationship
    between Gibson Brands and Gibson Piano Ventures.
    3Gibson Brands filed for bankruptcy in 2018 and subsequently
    conveyed its rights in the piano at issue in this appeal to Gibson
    Foundation.
    - 3 -
    was improper.      The case was then transferred to the United States
    District   Court    for   the   District   of   Massachusetts.      Gibson
    Foundation's amended -- and now operative -- complaint in the
    United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts
    sets forth several claims against Norris and Piano Mill, all of
    which are brought under Massachusetts law.         This appeal concerns
    two of those claims, which are for breach of bailment and breach
    of contract.
    The breach-of-bailment claim         alleges,   as did Gibson
    Foundation's earlier breach-of-bailment claim under Tennessee law,
    that the transfer of the Liberace piano from Gibson Brands to
    Norris and Piano Mill was a bailment and that Norris and Piano
    Mill are liable for breach of bailment because they refused to
    return the piano to Gibson Foundation when they were requested to
    do so.     The breach-of-contract claim         alleges,   as did   Gibson
    Foundation's earlier breach-of-contract claim under Tennessee law,
    that the transfer of the same piano from Gibson Brands to Norris
    and Piano Mill was made pursuant to a warehousing agreement between
    Gibson Brands and Norris and Piano Mill, and that Norris and Piano
    Mill breached the agreement by not returning the piano to Gibson
    Foundation when they were requested to do so.
    Norris and Piano Mill answered the complaint while also
    filing counterclaims, though none of the District Court's rulings
    on the counterclaims are at issue in this appeal.           In answering
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    Gibson Foundation's complaint, Norris and Piano Mill asserted that
    Gibson Brands had no ownership interest in the piano at the time
    of Gibson Brands's initial request that the piano be returned.
    Norris and Piano Mill further asserted in answering the complaint
    that Gibson Brands sent the e-mail request to return the piano
    only after there had been widespread media coverage of Piano Mill
    having a Liberace piano and the roof of one of the company's
    buildings having collapsed during a massive snowstorm.
    The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment on
    January 28, 2022.   Norris and Piano Mill sought summary judgment
    on, among other claims, Gibson Foundation's breach-of-bailment and
    breach-of-contract claims under Massachusetts law.   Norris's and
    Piano Mill's motion included as an exhibit an appraisal of the
    piano that contained pictures of it, approximated its value, and
    estimated that 10,000 rhinestones originally adorned it.      Gibson
    Foundation sought summary judgment as to all its claims and
    Norris's and Piano Mill's counterclaims.
    On the breach-of-bailment claim, the     District    Court
    granted Norris and Piano Mill summary judgment and denied Gibson
    Foundation summary judgment on the ground that Gibson Foundation's
    claim for breach of bailment is time-barred under the relevant
    statute of limitations.    On the breach-of-contract claim, the
    District Court granted Norris and Piano Mill summary judgment and
    denied Gibson Foundation summary judgment on the ground that
    - 5 -
    "[Gibson] Foundation has not produced sufficient evidence from
    which a jury could find an agreement on the material terms of a
    contract."    Gibson Foundation appeals both the grants of summary
    judgment to Norris and Piano Mill on its breach-of-bailment and
    breach-of-contract claims and the denials of its motion for summary
    judgment on those same claims.
    II.
    We review the District Court's summary-judgment rulings
    de novo and draw all inferences in favor of the party against whom
    summary    judgment     was   entered.        Pleasantdale      Condos.,      LLC    v.
    Wakefield, 
    37 F.4th 728
    , 732-33 (1st Cir. 2022).                    Summary judgment
    is appropriate if, based on the record, there remains no dispute
    of material fact -- that is, if, based on the record, there is no
    factual determination which a "rational factfinder" could make as
    to   the   "existence    or   nonexistence"      of     a   fact     that    "has   the
    potential to change the outcome of the suit" -- such that "the
    moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law."                      Borges
    ex rel. S.M.B.W. v. Serrano-Isern, 
    605 F.3d 1
    , 4-5 (1st Cir. 2010).
    The fact that the parties have filed cross motions and
    appealed    those     cross   motions    does     not       alter    these    general
    standards.    See Wightman v. Springfield Terminal Ry. Co., 
    100 F.3d 228
    , 230 (1st Cir. 1996).         Rather, we review each party's motion
    independently,      viewing    the   facts      and     drawing      inferences      as
    - 6 -
    required by the applicable standard, and we determine, for each
    side, the appropriate ruling.   See 
    id.
    III.
    We start with the challenge to the District Court's grant
    of summary judgment on the breach-of-bailment claim to Norris and
    Piano Mill.   The District Court relied for that ruling on the
    ground that the claim is time-barred.     The question of whether the
    claim is time-barred is one of Massachusetts law.        See West v.
    Conrail, 
    481 U.S. 35
    , 39 n.4 (1987) ("When the underlying cause of
    action is based on state law, and federal jurisdiction is based on
    diversity of citizenship, state law . . . provides the appropriate
    period of limitations . . . .").
    Our analysis begins with a review of the relevant legal
    background, which reveals that the key precedent for us to consider
    is a decision of the Massachusetts Appeals Court ("MAC"), Aimtek,
    Inc. v. Norton Co., 
    870 N.E.2d 1114
     (Mass. App. Ct. 2007).        We
    then explain why, given that precedent, we must reverse the grant
    of summary judgment.   We make clear, however, that Aimtek does not
    affect resolution of Norris's and Piano Mill's alternate argument
    that Gibson Brands never had ownership of the piano, which we
    address in Part IV.
    A.
    The parties do not dispute that Gibson Foundation's
    breach-of-bailment claim is timely if the six-year limitations
    - 7 -
    period that Massachusetts sets forth for certain contract claims
    applies, see 
    Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 260, § 2
    , or that the claim is
    time-barred    if,   as    the   District      Court    held,    the   three-year
    limitations period that Massachusetts sets forth for tort claims
    applies instead, see Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 260, § 2A.                 The parties'
    dispute concerns only whether the District Court was right to hold
    that, on this record, it is indisputable that Gibson Foundation's
    breach-of-bailment claim is in effect no different from a claim
    for conversion and replevin and so for that reason is subject to
    the   three-year     limitations      period    for    tort     claims.        Gibson
    Foundation contends that the District Court erred in so ruling
    because a reasonable juror could find based on the record that the
    claim is subject to the six-year limitations period that applies
    to certain contract claims.
    We assume for present purposes that there is a genuine
    issue   of   material     fact   in   dispute   as     to   whether,      as   Gibson
    Foundation alleges, there was both a valid bailment and a breach
    of that bailment, such that the breach-of-bailment claim would
    survive summary judgment if it were timely.                 After all, if there
    were no such genuine issue of material fact in dispute, then there
    would be no reason for us to address the timeliness issue at all,
    as in that case the grant of summary judgment to Norris and Piano
    Mill could be affirmed even if the claim were timely.                  See John G.
    Danielson, Inc. v. Winchester-Conant Props. Inc., 
    322 F.3d 26
    , 37
    - 8 -
    (1st Cir. 2003) (explaining that a judgment may be affirmed on any
    ground manifest in the record).
    No Massachusetts statute sets forth the limitations
    period that applies specifically to a breach-of-bailment claim.
    Thus, under Massachusetts law, we must look "to the 'gist of the
    action'    or   the    essential     nature    of   the    plaintiff's    claim,"
    Hendrickson     v.    Sears,   
    310 N.E.2d 131
    ,      132   (Mass.   1974),   to
    determine the applicable limitations period.
    The   District     Court    appears     to    have   undertaken   this
    inquiry and reasoned that, under Massachusetts law, the "essential
    nature" of all breach-of-bailment claims makes any such claim a
    species of a claim for replevin and conversion, both of which are
    claims that sound in tort.             The District Court then appears to
    have concluded on that basis that Gibson Foundation's breach-of-
    bailment claim is subject to a three-year limitations period, as
    that claim was in its nature a tort claim just as surely as is a
    claim for replevin or conversion.
    In Aimtek, however, the MAC explained that "no hard and
    fast rule has emerged to dictate the applicable limitations period
    for claims arising from bailments" based on their "essential
    nature."    870 N.E.2d at 1118.           Rather, the MAC concluded that
    while, under Massachusetts law, some breach-of-bailment claims are
    properly subject to the three-year limitations period for tort
    claims, others are properly subjected to the six-year limitations
    - 9 -
    period for certain contract claims.          Id. at 1117-20.    The MAC then
    proceeded in Aimtek to assess whether the "essential nature, or
    gist" of the plaintiff's breach-of-bailment claim in that specific
    case made it subject to the three-year or the six-year limitations
    period, id. at 1119-20, and concluded that the claim's contractual
    nature made the longer limitations period applicable, id. at 1120.
    Of course, a decision by the MAC does not necessarily
    bind us here, as our task is to determine how the highest court of
    Massachusetts, which is the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court,
    would rule on the timeliness issue.            See Showtime Ent., LLC v.
    Town of Mendon, 
    769 F.3d 61
    , 79 (1st Cir. 2014).               But we see no
    basis   for    engaging   in   a   different   inquiry   to   determine   the
    applicable limitations period for this breach-of-bailment claim
    than the one in which the MAC engaged in Aimtek.                 Indeed, the
    District Court's analysis supplies no reason for our doing so, as
    the District Court appeared to be relying, in part, on Aimtek
    itself in concluding that this claim was subject to the limitations
    period for tort claims.        Moreover, on appeal, the parties appear
    to agree that if the reasons that Aimtek gave for determining that
    the "essential nature, or gist," 870 N.E.2d at 1119, of the breach-
    of-bailment claim at issue there was contractual in nature equally
    support the conclusion that the breach-of-bailment claim at issue
    here is also contractual in nature, then the six-year limitations
    period would apply to this claim just as the MAC held it applied
    - 10 -
    to that claim.    As a result, assuming that this breach-of-bailment
    claim otherwise can survive summary judgment, we must decide
    whether a reasonable juror could find based on the record that the
    claim at issue here is in all relevant respects the same as the
    claim in Aimtek. Reviewing de novo, Pleasantdale Condos., 37 F.4th
    at 732-33, we conclude, for the reasons that we will next explain,
    that a reasonable juror could so find.
    B.
    In     Aimtek,     a     Massachusetts         company,       Aimtek,     Inc.
    ("Aimtek"),    entered      into    a    contract        in    1984     with   another
    Massachusetts-based        business,      Norton     Company          ("Norton"),    to
    provide liquid nitrogen and argon gases to Norton.                        Under that
    contract, Norton had a lease with Aimtek to store two 1,500-gallon
    tanks, owned by Aimtek, at Norton's Worcester, Massachusetts,
    facility to hold such gas products.              Aimtek, 870 N.E.2d at 1116.
    Roughly a decade later, in 1994, Norton notified Aimtek
    that it was terminating the contract.              Id.    After the contract was
    terminated, however, Aimtek left the tanks with Norton, at Norton's
    request, in the event that Norton wished to resume purchasing gas
    for those tanks from Aimtek in the future.                    Id. at 1116-17.
    Norton later scrapped the tanks, and more than three but
    less than six years after Aimtek learned that the tanks had been
    scrapped, Aimtek filed a claim against Norton in Massachusetts
    state court that alleged that Norton was in breach of a bailment
    - 11 -
    with respect to the tanks.           Id.     Following a jury verdict in
    Aimtek's   favor      on   the    claim,     Norton      moved    for   judgment
    notwithstanding the verdict on the ground that the three-year
    limitations period for tort claims applied to Aimtek's breach-of-
    bailment claim and thus that the claim was time-barred.                    Id. at
    1117.   The trial court denied the motion after determining that
    the   six-year   limitations      period   for    certain      contracts   claims
    applied instead, Aimtek, Inc. v. Norton Co., No. 01-0709C, 
    2005 WL 4924656
     (Mass. Supp. Sept. 7, 2005), and the MAC then affirmed
    that ruling on appeal, Aimtek, 870 N.E.2d at 1120.
    The MAC reasoned that the six-year limitations period
    for certain contract claims applied because the record supportably
    showed that the underlying bailment stemmed from "a consensual
    arrangement between the parties that the two 1,500-gallon tanks
    would   remain   at    Norton's    facility      after   the     written   rental
    agreement expired, in case Norton wished to resume gas deliveries
    in the future."       Id. at 1119 (emphasis added).         Moreover, the MAC
    emphasized that the record sufficed to show that the bailment
    established by this consensual arrangement was for the "mutual
    benefit" of the parties and so was not a gratuitous bailment in
    which Norton received "no benefit or compensation from the tanks
    left behind at its facility."          Id.       The MAC based this latter
    determination on the ground that the record sufficed to show that,
    under the consensual arrangement that resulted in the bailment,
    - 12 -
    Aimtek benefitted by avoiding the expense of removing the tanks
    while Norton benefitted because "the tanks were left in Norton's
    possession at Norton's request, to facilitate possible future gas
    deliveries."      Id.
    The   MAC   did   make    a    point   of   explaining    that    the
    determination of whether a bailment was gratuitous or for the
    mutual benefit of the bailor and the bailee does not necessarily
    determine whether a breach-of-bailment claim is subject to the
    three-year limitations period for tort actions or the six-year
    limitations period for certain contract actions.              Id. at 1119 n.5.
    The MAC concluded that "[t]he cases do not lend themselves to such
    a convenient dichotomy."        Id.       But the MAC still ruled that the
    bailment in question was subject to that latter contract-based
    limitations period because the underlying bailment was the result
    of   a   "consensual    arrangement . . . for           the   parties'     mutual
    benefit."    Id. at 1119-20 (emphasis added).
    We see nothing in the record to distinguish the case at
    hand from Aimtek.       Rather, we conclude that a reasonable juror
    could find based on the record that the breach-of-bailment claim
    here, like the breach-of-bailment claim in Aimtek, stems from a
    consensual     arrangement     between       the   parties     that      mutually
    benefitted them and not from a merely gratuitous bailment, as
    Norris and Piano Mill contended is the case for the first time at
    - 13 -
    oral argument.     In this regard, we conclude that, based on the
    record, a reasonable juror could find as follows.
    On     June   20,   2011,   Baldwin's    business-development
    manager, Tom Dorn, e-mailed several people, including Norris,
    about the immediate availability of two new model BD275/BH275
    concert grand pianos from Baldwin Dongbei.        Norris then responded
    by e-mail that "Piano Mill would still very much like to have a
    Baldwin concert grand to use for symphony rentals and promotional
    opportunities" but that he was "not currently in a position to
    shell out the 30k to purchase one outright."           In addition, Norris
    mentioned in the e-mail that his business partner was connected to
    several touring acts and wondered whether Dorn might be able to
    come up with a "creative arrangement" to help both Piano Mill and
    Baldwin gain exposure.
    Dorn responded, in turn, with an e-mail that stated that
    such an arrangement was "beyond [his] scope" but that he would
    forward   Norris's      e-mail   to   someone     in     Gibson   Brands's
    entertainment-relations department.       Norris sent Dorn an e-mail in
    response in which Norris thanked Dorn and added as "just another
    thought" that Piano Mill had a full-service restoration shop and
    that, "[i]f there was a road worn concert grand in Baldwin[']s
    stable," Norris would be able to do any restoration required "to
    get it to concert level play and back on the road."
    - 14 -
    After this e-mail exchange, Norris had several phone
    calls with Dorn and Jim Felber, an employee in Gibson Brands's
    entertainment-relations department, about a Baldwin model SD-10 in
    which Norris might be interested.              That model was the Liberace
    piano that is now at the center of this dispute.
    During one phone call between Norris and Felber about
    the piano, Felber told Norris that it was on the seventh floor of
    the Manhattan Center in the Hammerstein ballroom, which was being
    renovated.       Felber further told Norris in the phone call that the
    piano would be "all yours" if Norris could remove it by the end of
    the week.
    Subsequently, on July 11, 2011, Norris's contractors
    moved    the     piano   from   the   Hammerstein   ballroom   to    Norris's
    restoration shop in Hampton, Massachusetts.           After picking up the
    piano, Norris e-mailed Dorn and Felber to "[t]hank [them] both for
    [the] opportunity," and Norris asked whether he could "make some
    cosmetic repairs as well as . . . do some fine regulation" on the
    piano.   Felber responded that he was "OK with repairs and aware of
    missing pieces."
    In the years following, the piano stayed in Norris's and
    Piano Mill's possession, and the piano was used as a promotional
    tool, including in connection with a Liberace biopic.               It was not
    until years later, after Gibson Brands and Gibson Foundation
    executed a bill of sale purporting to transfer ownership of a
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    "Baldwin   Liberace      SD-10"    to     Gibson   Foundation,    that   Gibson
    Foundation sued Norris and Piano Mill over the Liberace piano at
    the center of this dispute.
    Based    on     the    above    communications   and    events,    a
    factfinder could reasonably determine that, insofar as there was
    a bailment of the piano at all, it was a "consensual arrangement,"
    id. at 1119, between Gibson Brands and Norris and Piano Mill, as
    Gibson Brands requested that Norris and Piano Mill take possession
    of the piano, and Norris and Piano Mill agreed to do so.             Moreover,
    a   factfinder     could    also     reasonably      determine    from    these
    communications and events that Gibson Brands as bailor and Norris
    and Piano Mill as bailees each benefitted from this consensual
    arrangement, as a reasonable jury could find based on the record
    that Gibson Brands obtained storage for a valuable asset and
    avoided the costs of moving the piano while Norris and Piano Mill
    obtained substantial publicity and marketing opportunities from
    having possession of the piano.
    Norris and Piano Mill do make one further argument in
    defense of the District Court's statute-of-limitations ruling,
    although they advanced this argument, too, for the first time at
    oral argument.      They contend that because there was a contract
    between the bailor and the bailee in Aimtek, there was a basis
    there that is not present here for treating that breach-of-bailment
    claim as contractual in nature.            But the contract in Aimtek that
    - 16 -
    Norris and Piano Mill identify was a rental agreement that had
    expired prior to the bailment.    Id. at 1116.   We thus do not see
    how Aimtek may be distinguished on this ground.     Accordingly, we
    hold that Norris and Piano Mill are not entitled to summary
    judgment on Gibson Foundation's breach-of-bailment claim on the
    ground that the claim is time-barred.
    IV.
    Norris and Piano Mill argue, as a fallback, that they
    are entitled to summary judgment on the breach-of-bailment claim
    even if the claim is not time-barred because, as a matter of law,
    the claim is without merit.   See John G. Danielson, 
    322 F.3d at 37
    (explaining that a judgment may be affirmed on any ground manifest
    in the record).   They point out that a bailment "is the delivery
    of goods by their owner to another for a specific purpose, and the
    acceptance of those goods by the other, with the express or implied
    promise that the goods will be returned after the purpose of the
    delivery has been fulfilled."     Goudy & Stevens, Inc. v. Cable
    Marine, Inc., 
    924 F.2d 16
    , 18 (1st Cir. 1991) (emphasis added);
    see Nash v. Lang, 
    167 N.E. 762
    , 765 (Mass. 1929).       Thus, they
    explain, one of the essential elements of a bailment is that the
    bailor owns, or holds title to, the property in question, see
    Goudy, 
    924 F.2d at 18
    , and they stress that the burden of proving
    the existence of a bailment under Massachusetts law rests with the
    party that alleges the breach of a bailment, see Orient Overseas
    - 17 -
    Container Line v. John T. Clark & Sons of Bos., Inc., 
    229 F. Supp. 2d 4
    , 15 (D. Mass. 2002). They then contend that Gibson Foundation
    has failed to meet its burden to show that there is a supportable
    basis for finding that it has proved the element of ownership
    because "[Gibson] Foundation [has] provided nothing more than
    unsupported, conclusory statements and vague documentation in
    support of its claim that [its] alleged predecessor in interest,
    Gibson Brands, Inc., owned the piano during the timeframe up to
    and including July 2011" -- the month in which Norris and Piano
    Mill picked up the piano and transferred it to their restoration
    shop in Hampton, Massachusetts.4
    To back up this argument, Norris and Piano Mill point to
    the fact that Cesar Gueikian, Brand President of Gibson Brands,
    testified that, although he believed Gibson Brands acquired the
    piano through the 2001 asset purchase agreement of Baldwin, he was
    unaware of the existence or location of any inventory documents
    that       show    the   piano   coming    into    Gibson   Brands's   possession.
    Moreover, we note that the record does show that, while the asset
    Norris and Piano Mill also contend that Gibson Foundation's
    4
    breach-of-bailment claim fails as a matter of law because Gibson
    Foundation cannot show that a reasonable juror could find based on
    the record that the material terms -- whether express or
    implied -- of the alleged bailment agreement are sufficiently
    definite to create an enforceable agreement.         Because this
    contention mirrors Norris's and Piano Mill's contention as to why
    Gibson Foundation's breach-of-contract claim fails, we address
    this argument in Part V, where we discuss the claim for breach of
    contract.
    - 18 -
    purchase agreement did contemplate the sale of Baldwin's "personal
    property"   and   specified      that   certain      categories     of   personal
    property would be excluded from the sale, the agreement did not
    identify whether any pianos were included among the personal
    property being sold.
    In addition, Norris and Piano Mill point to the fact
    that, when Gibson Brands filed for bankruptcy in 2018, Gibson
    Brands did not disclose the piano as one of its assets in its
    filings.     Norris   and      Piano    Mill   argue      that   because   Gibson
    Foundation cannot point to any evidence in the record of Gibson
    Brands   having   title   or    ownership      of   the   piano,   there   is   no
    supportable basis in the record for finding that Gibson Foundation
    can meet its burden to show that there was a bailment.                          The
    contention is that, to meet that burden, Gibson Foundation must
    show that a reasonable juror could find based on the record that
    Gibson Brands owned the piano at the time that Norris and Piano
    Mill took possession of it.        Therefore, Norris's and Piano Mill's
    argument goes, Gibson Foundation's breach-of-bailment claim fails
    as a matter of law given that Piano Mill cannot breach a bailment
    that does not exist.
    Under Massachusetts law, however, the burden to prove
    the ownership element for a bailment may be satisfied with proof
    of the bailor's possession of the property at issue at the time
    that the claimed bailment was established, given that "possession
    - 19 -
    [of personal property] is prima facie evidence of title, good
    against everybody but one proving property; that is, against any
    one but the right owner."          Magee v. Scott, 
    63 Mass. (9 Cush.) 148
    ,
    150 (1851); see Hurley v. Noone, 
    196 N.E.2d 905
    , 908 (Mass. 1964).
    And it is undisputed that Gibson Brands physically possessed the
    piano before Gibson Brands transferred it to Norris and Piano Mill.
    Thus, as Norris and Piano Mill identify no evidence that anyone
    other than Gibson Brands owned the piano before or during the time
    of the piano transfer, we see no basis for affirming the District
    Court's grant of summary judgment to Norris and Piano Mill on the
    ground that, as a matter of law, Gibson Foundation cannot show
    that a reasonable juror could find based on the record that Gibson
    Brands owned the piano at the relevant times.5              See Magee, 63 Mass.
    at 150.
    Our determination on this score does not mean, however,
    that there is merit to the related contention by Gibson Foundation
    that       we   must   reverse   the   District   Court's    denial   of   Gibson
    Foundation's own summary-judgment motion on the claim. To be sure,
    as we have explained, Norris and Piano Mill have not conclusively
    rebutted Gibson Foundation's prima facie case for ownership of the
    piano because they have not indisputably established that a party
    Norris and Piano Mill do not argue that, if there was a
    5
    bailment, it was between them and Gibson Brands, not them and
    Gibson Foundation -- the current plaintiff. We thus do not address
    that contention.
    - 20 -
    other than Gibson Brands was the rightful owner when the piano was
    in Gibson Brands's possession.       Id.      But it remains the case that
    the record contains no inventory documents that show how the piano
    came into Gibson Brands's possession and that the record shows
    that Gibson Brands failed to include the piano as one of its assets
    in its 2018 bankruptcy filings.           A reasonable factfinder could
    conclude on this record, therefore, that Gibson Brands did not own
    the piano at the relevant times.        Thus, because there is a genuine
    dispute of material fact as to the ownership issue, we affirm the
    denial of the grant of summary judgment to Gibson Foundation on
    this claim.
    V.
    We turn our attention now to Gibson Foundation's breach-
    of-contract    claim.     "To   prove     a   breach     of   contract   under
    Massachusetts law, a plaintiff must show 'that there was a valid
    contract,   that   the   defendant   breached      its    duties   under   the
    contractual agreement, and that the breach caused the plaintiff
    damage.'"     Shaulis v. Nordstrom Inc., 
    120 F. Supp. 3d 40
    , 54 (D.
    Mass. 2015) (quoting Guckenberger v. Boston Univ., 
    957 F. Supp. 306
    , 316 (D. Mass. 1997)).
    As we have explained, a reasonable juror could find based
    on the record both that the bailment at issue here was a consensual
    arrangement between Gibson Brands and Norris and Piano Mill and
    that this arrangement was for the "mutual benefit" of the parties
    - 21 -
    to it, Aimtek, 870 N.E.2d at 1119.            Our question with regard to
    the breach-of-contract claim, however, is whether, Massachusetts
    bailment law aside, a reasonable juror could find based on the
    record that there was a warehousing agreement6 between the parties
    as to this piano such that there was a valid contract between them.
    For, if a reasonable juror could not so find, then there could be
    no breach-of-contract claim that could survive summary judgment.
    Under Massachusetts law, "[i]t is axiomatic that to
    create an enforceable contract, there must be agreement between
    the parties on the material terms of that contract, and the parties
    must have a present intention to be bound by that agreement."
    Situation Mgmt. Sys., Inc. v. Malouf, Inc., 
    724 N.E.2d 699
    , 703
    (Mass. 2000).          And while "[i]t is not required that all terms of
    the agreement be precisely specified, and the presence of undefined
    or unspecified terms will not necessarily preclude the formation
    of   a       binding   contract[,] . . . [t]he   parties   must . . . have
    progressed beyond the stage of 'imperfect negotiation.'"               
    Id.
    (citation omitted).           Moreover, although an exchange of e-mail
    communications can constitute a contract under Massachusetts law,
    see Fecteau Benefits Grp., Inc. v. Knox, 
    890 N.E.2d 138
    , 145 (Mass.
    App. Ct. 2008), "[a]ll the essential terms of a contract must be
    definite and certain so that the intention of the parties may be
    Gibson Foundation sometimes refers to this warehousing
    6
    agreement in its briefing to us as a "loan agreement."
    - 22 -
    discovered,   the   nature   and   extent   of   their   obligations
    ascertained, and their rights determined," Cygan v. Megathlin, 
    96 N.E.2d 702
    , 703 (Mass. 1951).
    The District Court ruled that Norris and Piano Mill were
    entitled to summary judgment on Gibson Foundation's breach-of-
    contract claim because a reasonable juror could not find based on
    the record that all the essential terms of the alleged contract
    were definite and certain.   Gibson Foundation disagrees.
    According to Gibson Foundation, the record suffices to
    show that Gibson Brands offered for Norris and Piano Mill to take
    possession of the piano on the condition that they would have to
    return it to Gibson Brands if and when Gibson Brands asked for it.
    Gibson Foundation then goes on to argue that a reasonable juror
    could find based on the record that Norris and Piano Mill accepted
    this offer by taking possession of the piano.7 Accordingly, Gibson
    7 Gibson Foundation also contends that the agreement that
    Norris and Piano Mill themselves posit as having been struck is
    just as simple -- the offer was that Norris and Piano Mill could
    have the piano, so long as they bore the expense of moving it, and
    the acceptance occurred when Norris and Piano Mill picked up the
    piano and stored it.    Gibson Foundation then argues that under
    that view of the agreement, there is "everything needed to be a
    contract [--] mutual assent through offer and acceptance and
    consideration for each party." But this contention does little to
    support Gibson Foundation's position on appeal.          As Gibson
    Foundation concedes, Norris and Piano Mill accepted Gibson
    Brands's offer that Norris and Piano Mill could have the piano so
    long as they bore the expense of moving it by taking possession of
    the piano. Thus, if the simple contract at issue were only the
    one that Gibson Foundation argues even Norris and Piano Mill accept
    - 23 -
    Foundation argues, a reasonable juror could find based on the
    record that the claimed warehousing agreement with respect to the
    piano has "everything needed to be a contract [--] mutual assent
    through offer and acceptance and consideration for each party."
    Gibson Foundation describes the consideration as Gibson Brands
    being able to avoid storage costs and Norris and Piano Mill
    benefitting from having a promotional item to use until Gibson
    Brands (and now Gibson Foundation) were to ask for the piano to be
    returned.    Reviewing de novo, Pleasantdale Condos., 37 F.4th at
    732-33, we agree with Gibson Foundation.
    As we have previously explained, a reasonable juror
    could find on this record that Gibson Brands owned the piano before
    and when Norris and Piano Mill picked it up.     Gibson Foundation
    also points to several facts in the summary-judgment record that
    supportably show that Gibson Brands did not transfer ownership of
    the piano to Norris and Piano Mill.    In that regard, the record
    supportably shows that Norris, via an e-mail to Dorn, asked to
    use -- not buy -- a piano from Gibson Brands for promotional
    opportunities and that Norris, after picking up the piano from the
    existed, then there would appear to be no basis in the record for
    finding that the breach-of-contract claim could survive summary
    judgment, because, in that event, there would appear to be no basis
    in the record for finding that the contract had been breached.
    - 24 -
    Hammerstein ballroom, then asked for permission via e-mail to
    Gibson Brands to conduct repairs on it.8
    In concluding that a reasonable factfinder could find on
    this record that the "simple" contract posited by Gibson Foundation
    exists, we emphasize that the aspects of the record just described
    supportably show that both parties understood which piano was to
    be picked up from the Hammerstein ballroom and that this piano was
    the one that grounds this claim.       Moreover, although the District
    Court emphasized to the parties in the final pretrial conference
    on October 14, 2022, that there was no "price" specified for this
    simple contract, the contract that is being alleged here is not
    for the sale of goods.    Cf. Jacobson v. Perman, 
    131 N.E. 174
    , 175
    (Mass. 1921) ("[T]he memorandum was sufficient evidence of [a]
    contract . . . [because] it contains all the essential elements of
    the contract . . . [including] the quantity sold and the price to
    be paid therefor . . . .").     Rather, the consideration that Gibson
    Brands   allegedly   received   took   the   form   of   avoiding   storage
    costs -- in consequence of Norris and Piano Mill having taken
    possession of the piano -- and not a payment.             Thus, we do not
    8 Gibson Foundation also raises on appeal the issue of whether
    the District Court improperly disregarded, as hearsay, evidence of
    internal e-mails between Gibson Brands employees that tended to
    show the existence of a warehousing agreement between Gibson
    Foundation and Piano Mill. Because we find, even without these e-
    mails, a genuine issue of material fact as to whether a contract
    exists between Gibson Foundation and Norris and Piano Mill, we do
    not address this contention.
    - 25 -
    see, and Norris and Piano Mill do not explain, why there must be
    a price for a contract of this nature to be valid.     And, finally,
    while the District Court also suggested at the final pretrial
    conference that there was no agreement between the parties as to
    duration, a reasonable juror could find on this record that the
    parties agreed that Norris and Piano Mill would retain possession
    of the piano until Gibson Brands requested that it be returned.
    Thus, because we conclude that a reasonable juror could find on
    this record that the alleged contract's "essential terms" were
    "definite and certain" such that the "intention of the parties
    could be discovered, the nature and extent of their obligations
    ascertained, and their rights determined," Cygan, 96 N.E.2d at
    703, we must reverse the District Court's grant of summary judgment
    to Norris and Piano Mill on the breach-of-contract claim.9
    At the same time, we also must reject Gibson Foundation's
    contention that it is entitled to summary judgment on the claim
    and thus that we may not uphold the District Court's ruling to the
    contrary.    As discussed in Part IV, there is a genuine issue of
    material fact as to whether Gibson Foundation or its purported
    predecessor in title, Gibson Brands, owned the piano in question.
    And that is significant because if Gibson Foundation or Gibson
    9 Norris and Piano Mill do not argue that, if there was a
    warehousing agreement, it was between them and Gibson Brands, not
    them and Gibson Foundation -- the current plaintiff. We thus do
    not address that contention.
    - 26 -
    Brands never owned or held title to the piano in question, then
    there would be no basis in this record for finding that there was
    a warehousing agreement between the parties.
    Moreover, Norris and Piano Mill contend that, in any
    event, even if a reasonable juror could find based on the record
    that Gibson Brands did own the piano before Norris and Piano Mill
    took possession of it, a reasonable juror also could find on this
    record that, insofar as Gibson Brands owned the piano, Gibson
    Brands then gave it away to Norris and Piano Mill as a gift.10
    They point to the evidence in the record that supportably shows
    that    Felber,   an   employee   in   Gibson   Brands's   entertainment-
    relations department, told Norris and Piano Mill that the piano
    would be "all yours" if Norris and Piano Mill could remove the
    piano by the end of the week, which they did.          Thus, because we
    conclude that Norris and Piano Mill are right that the record
    evidence would permit a rational factfinder to determine that the
    piano was given to them as a gift, we must reject, for this reason,
    too, Gibson Foundation's challenge to the District Court's denial
    of its summary-judgment motion.
    Of course, should this case proceed to trial, the parties
    10
    would be able to introduce evidence in addition to what is in the
    summary-judgment record.
    - 27 -
    VI.
    The District Court's award of summary judgment to Norris
    and Piano Mill for the breach-of-bailment claim is reversed, while
    the   District   Court's   denial   of    summary   judgment   to   Gibson
    Foundation for the breach-of-bailment claim on alternative grounds
    is affirmed.     In addition, the District Court's award of summary
    judgment to Norris and Piano Mill for the breach-of-contract claim
    is reversed,     while   its denial of summary judgment to Gibson
    Foundation for the breach-of-contract claim is affirmed.             Costs
    are taxed in favor of Gibson Foundation.
    - 28 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 22-1837

Filed Date: 12/4/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/4/2023