USA MacHinery Corp. v. CSC, Ltd. ( 1999 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    1999 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    7-16-1999
    USA Machinery Corp v. CSC LTD
    Precedential or Non-Precedential:
    Docket 98-3282
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    Recommended Citation
    "USA Machinery Corp v. CSC LTD" (1999). 1999 Decisions. Paper 201.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_1999/201
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    Filed July 16, 1999
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    No. 98-3282
    USA MACHINERY CORPORATION,
    a Pennsylvania Corporation
    v.
    CSC, LTD., an Ohio Corporation;
    ALGOMA STEEL INC., an Ontario Corporation
    USA Machinery Corporation,
    Appellant
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. No. 96-cv-01768)
    District Judge: Hon. Alan N. Bloch
    Argued February 8, 1999
    Before: SLOVITER, ROTH and STAPLETON, Circuit Judges
    (Filed July 16, 1999)
    Jarrell D. Wright (Argued)
    Christopher R. Opalinski
    Eckert, Seamans, Cherin & Mellott
    Pittsburgh, PA 15219
    Attorneys for Appellant
    Craig W. Jones (Argued)
    Reed, Smith, Shaw & McClay
    Pittsburgh, PA 15219
    Attorney for Appellee
    CSC, Ltd., an Ohio Corporation
    Michael J. Betts (Argued)
    Renee A. Metal
    Betts Law Offices
    Pittsburgh, PA 15238
    Attorneys for Appellee
    Algoma Steel Inc., an Ontario
    Corporation
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    SLOVITER, Circuit Judge.
    I.
    USA Machinery Corporation ("USA") appeals the District
    Court's order granting judgment as a matter of law in favor
    of CSC, Ltd. ("CSC") and Algoma Steel, Inc. ("Algoma").
    USA's seven-count complaint raised claims of breach of
    contract, tortious interference with contract, unjust
    enrichment, promissory estoppel, and fraud. On appeal,
    USA presses only the claims asserted in the first, second,
    and fifth counts of its complaint: those alleging breach of
    contract and unjust enrichment on the part of both
    defendants.
    This case arises from the efforts of USA, and in particular
    its president, Robert Hughes, to act as a broker for the sale
    of an assemblage of steel-making equipment, a "continuous
    caster,"1 from Algoma to CSC. When Algoma sold the
    equipment to CSC directly, USA sued the two companies in
    the United States District Court for the Western District of
    _________________________________________________________________
    1. Hughes described a caster as follows:
    [I]t includes a multitude of pieces of equipment and it includes
    nine
    bridge cranes, nine ladles, transfer cars, ladle met[sic] station,
    and
    the caster. All of that equipment is several hundred tons. It would
    probably take up, my guess would be, two or three times this room
    size of boxes of equipment, and that's not saying how big it would
    be after it is assembled.
    App. at 81.
    2
    Pennsylvania. Trial commenced on April 13, 1998. At the
    close of plaintiff's case, the District Court, on defendants'
    motions under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50, ruled
    from the bench that USA failed to present sufficient
    evidence to reach the jury on its claims of breach of
    contract and unjust enrichment, and entered judgment as
    a matter of law. For the following reasons, we will affirm.
    II.
    Counts one and two of the complaint, the breach of
    contract claims against Algoma and CSC, allege that USA
    had contracts with each defendant, which defendants
    breached by dealing directly with each other rather than
    through USA. Specifically, USA alleges in count one that
    "CSC and USA Machinery entered into a contract under
    which CSC was obligated to deal with Algoma exclusively
    through USA Machinery and was obligated to pay to USA a
    finder's fee upon closure of the CSC-Algoma transaction."
    App. at 15. Similarly, with respect to Algoma, count two
    states that "Algoma and USA Machinery entered into a
    contract under which Algoma was obligated to deal with
    CSC exclusively through USA Machinery and was obligated
    to pay USA Machinery a finder's fee upon closure of the
    CSC-Algoma transaction." App. at 16.
    USA's unjust enrichment claim is set forth in countfive
    of the complaint. This count states, in pertinent part:
    USA Machinery supplied information and services to
    Defendants, and therefore conferred a substantial
    value and benefit upon Defendants.
    At all times relevant hereto, Defendants were aware
    and acknowledged that USA Machinery was supplying
    information and services with the expectation of
    receiving compensation therefor.
    USA Machinery has not been paid for its services or
    for the value and benefit it conferred upon Defendants.
    It would be unjust and inequitable for Defendants to
    retain the value and benefit conferred upon them by
    USA Machinery without compensation 
    therefor. 3 Ohio App. at 18
    (allegation numbers omitted).
    We review the record in a light most favorable to USA.
    See Lightning Lube, Inc. v. Witco Corp., 
    4 F.3d 1153
    , 1166
    (3d Cir. 1993). At trial, USA rested its case on the
    testimony of one witness, Hughes, and a number of
    documents introduced through Hughes's testimony.
    Hughes testified that USA is principally in the business
    of "buying and selling and brokering used steel mill
    equipment." App. at 80. Some 80% of USA's business
    consists of brokering sales of steel mill equipment, and 20%
    consists of selling equipment that USA owns. As Hughes
    testified, "brokerage" deals were structured either as (1)
    direct purchases between the buyer and the seller, with all
    parties having agreed to a fee to be paid to USA, or (2)
    "spread" transactions whereby USA consummates two
    transactions simultaneously -- a purchase by USA of the
    equipment from the seller and a concomitant sale from USA
    to the buyer, with USA's profit consisting of the difference
    in price between the two transactions.
    Hughes testified as follows regarding the structure of
    transactions in his business:
    It is customary in our business that no agreement is
    made until the end. The written agreement is the
    purchase order. I have been doing it for 30 years, it's
    never been different. We never enter into binding legal
    contracts other than the purchase order which says, I
    agree to purchase the equipment, and we offer -- you
    know, it depends on the structuring of the deal, but
    that's the end of the deal. That's when the contract is
    put down on paper as to exactly the scope of the
    purchase.
    App. at 93.
    When he was then asked what was agreed upon at the
    outset of such deals, Hughes responded:
    What we agree on at the outset of the deal is that
    when we are brokering equipment, we get the buyer of
    the equipment to agree that, look, we are here to
    service you, we are here to find equipment for you, but
    in return once I find equipment for you, you're going to
    4
    deal with me and purchase it and you are not going to
    go around me once I find it for you and try to buy it
    direct.
    From the seller, the seller agrees if I bring him a
    customer, a customer he does not have, I'm giving him
    the opportunity to have a sale, he agrees not to deal
    directly with my customer and have any
    communication with my customer so I can
    consummate a deal. That's the agreement we usually
    have at the end of the deal.
    App. at 94.
    With respect to the transaction at issue in this case,
    Hughes testified that on November 25, 1995, he attended a
    meeting at CSC with Dan Stefano, a representative of CSC,
    at which Stefano related CSC's intention to construct a new
    melt shop facility -- a facility for the melting and refining of
    scrap steel. At the end of the discussion, Stefano stated
    "that he would be interested in any piece of used equipment
    that would fit any of the equipment needs that they had for
    this new project." App. at 130. The following day, Stefano
    told Hughes that CSC was in need of ladles, and Hughes
    related that he found some ladles that might be of interest
    to CSC. On November 28, 1995, Hughes sent Stefano
    information on the ladles. App. at 279. There was no
    communication between CSC and USA for approximately
    five months following this meeting. App. at 133.
    In April 1996, Stefano contacted Hughes by telephone
    and introduced him to Tony Wilson, the director of CSC's
    plan for expanding its facility. App. at 134. During this
    conversation, Wilson indicated that CSC was interested in
    finding used equipment for its expansion project,
    specifically an electric arc furnace. 
    Id. On April
    30, 1996,
    Hughes forwarded a letter and accompanying information
    about a furnace of this kind to Wilson. Shortly thereafter,
    Hughes met with Wilson at CSC's office in Ohio, where the
    two discussed the arc furnace and the possibility of Hughes
    finding other equipment for CSC. When Hughes was asked
    by his counsel whether a caster was referred to in these
    discussions, Hughes replied that "I am sure it was
    discussed, but I don't recall right now." App. at 139.
    5
    On May 17, 1996, Wilson visited USA's office in
    Pennsylvania; at this meeting Wilson reviewed information
    that Hughes had on various pieces of equipment, including
    the arc furnace. App. at 141-42. CSC ultimately never
    purchased the arc furnace that Hughes had found.
    At this time, USA was also doing business with Algoma,
    from which it had bought used equipment in the past. On
    June 26, 1996, Hughes went to Algoma's facility in Sault
    Ste. Marie, Ontario to inspect and finalize its purchase of a
    "bridge crane trolley" that it later resold in what Hughes
    described as a "spread" transaction. App. at 145-46. In the
    course of his visit, Hughes met with Bill Tucker and Paul
    Logan of Algoma. Logan led Hughes on a tour of the facility
    during which the two discussed used equipment that
    Algoma might be willing to sell, and Logan mentioned that
    Algoma had a caster that was not being used. App. at 147-
    48. Hughes then met with Tucker again and asked Tucker
    about the caster. Tucker responded that it was not
    presently for sale, but when Hughes stated that he had "a
    customer who may be interested in this caster," Tucker
    stated that "we would be very interested in any customer
    that you would have for the caster." App. at 148. No sale
    price for the caster was discussed at this or any
    subsequent meeting with Algoma officials. App. at 149.
    According to Hughes's testimony on cross-examination,
    Hughes did not initiate any communication with CSC
    regarding the Algoma caster after he returned to
    Pennsylvania following his trip to Algoma's facility. App. at
    225-26. According to Hughes's direct testimony, he never
    discussed with CSC the possibility of an exclusive contract
    with USA for the purchase or sale of any caster. Nor did he
    discuss an exclusive arrangement with Algoma whereby
    USA had the exclusive right to sell Algoma's caster. App. at
    159-60.
    On July 8, 1996, Al Zalner of CSC called Hughes,
    explaining that he was now the official charged with the
    responsibility of overseeing CSC's expansion effort. Zalner,
    like Wilson, told Hughes that CSC was interested infinding
    any used equipment that would suit the company's needs.
    App. at 150. When Hughes asked Zalner if CSC would be
    interested in finding a used caster, Zalner replied that the
    6
    company had been searching for one but had given up.
    App. at 151. Hughes then informed Zalner that he had
    found one and Zalner asked Hughes to "get me as much
    information as you can." App. at 151. The conversation
    then turned to the nine ladles that had been previously
    discussed. When Zalner asked where the ladles were
    located, Hughes responded that he "could not divulge the
    location of the ladles until [he] registered CSC as his
    customer," when he would be "glad to give [Zalner] the
    information and location." App. at 153. Hughes testified
    that Zalner responded by saying "okay." App. at 153.
    Hughes also testified that he informed Zalner that the
    manufacturer of the caster was Voest Alpine. App. at 168.
    Hughes then called Tucker at Algoma informing him that
    USA had a customer that was interested in inspecting the
    ladles. Hughes further stated that he wanted to "register"
    the customer as USA's customer. Tucker reportedly stated
    "yes, we accept your registration." App. at 156. When
    Hughes was pressed by both counsel and the court on the
    issue of whether the caster was discussed in this
    conversation, Hughes responded in the affirmative, but
    gave no indication of the nature of that discussion. App. at
    154-55. After this conversation, Hughes wrote to Tucker
    stating: "As discussed we have a customer interested in
    purchasing your nine 95 ton ladles. Our customer asked us
    to divulge the location so that they can make arrangements
    for an inspection. We now wish to register our customer
    with you for protection. Our customer is CSC . . . . Should
    our customer contact you directly or indirectly please ask
    them to make all inquiries through USA Machinery
    Corporation." App. at 282. The letter made no mention of
    the caster. Hughes did not send a comparable letter to
    CSC.
    Hughes then had several conversations with Logan at
    Algoma in which Hughes requested information about the
    caster. On July 11, 1996, Hughes sent Zalner at CSC a
    letter containing information on the caster. The letter
    described the caster as including a "ladle turret" and
    possibly "some bridge cranes." There is no mention of ladles
    being part of the caster unit in the letter. The letter
    continued: "This equipment is not currently on the market
    7
    for sale. However, it is possible that an agreement to sell
    can be reached in the future. If you are interested, I
    suggest that we inspect the caster and at that time we can
    discuss some of the parameters of your interest and the
    owner's future plan." App. at 285.
    Hughes testified that "right around" July 11, he had a
    phone conversation with Zalner in which Hughes informed
    Zalner that the owner of the caster was Algoma. Zalner
    responded, "yes, I know that the caster is at Algoma." App.
    at 168. When Hughes then asked Zalner how he knew,
    Zalner replied that he had called Voest Alpine, the
    manufacturer, who informed Zalner of the owner. Hughes
    then said to Zalner, "you're just operating on my
    information," to which Zalner replied, "yes, you're right."
    App. at 168-69. On July 12, Hughes sent Zalner a letter
    describing the caster and several associated pieces of
    equipment. The letter also stated that "this equipment is
    made to be used with the 95 ton ladles we have been
    discussing." The letter closed stating, "I am looking forward
    to our site inspection at which time we can discuss the
    pertinent variables which effects [sic] a project of this size."
    App. at 286.
    From July 12 to July 18, Hughes had several
    conversations with Zalner in which Zalner repeatedly asked
    Hughes to get more information about the caster. During
    this period, Hughes attempted to arrange a site inspection
    for CSC at Algoma. After receiving a drawing of the caster
    from Algoma on July 19, Hughes delivered the drawing to
    Zalner. On July 22, Hughes called Zalner to ask whether he
    was ready to go to Algoma to inspect the equipment. Zalner
    responded by telling Hughes that he was going to Algoma
    on July 24, having already "made arrangements with
    Algoma." App. at 180-81. In a phone conversation later the
    same day between Hughes, Zalner, and Tom Fisher of CSC,
    Hughes complained that CSC was circumventing him.
    Hughes related the reaction of Zalner and Fisher thus:
    "Basically they said to me that although I had found the
    caster for them -- and they freely admitted that I was the
    one that found the caster -- that if I had a commission due,
    my problem was to go to Algoma and they had no contract
    with me . . . ." App. at 181-82.
    8
    Hughes then called Tucker at Algoma, complaining that
    Algoma was dealing directly with USA's customer despite
    the registration letter. According to Hughes, Tucker
    responded "that it was basically out of his hands." Hughes
    went on to relate that Tucker told him "[t]hat corporate had
    made a decision that because my registration letter was not
    signed by Algoma they felt justified in not honoring. And
    that although he felt that they were going to give me
    protection on the ladles that it was corporate's stance that
    because there was no signature, there was nothing I could
    do about it and it was my tough luck." App. at 183-84. The
    following month, on August 23, 1996, Algoma sold the
    caster and associated equipment, including the ladles, to
    CSC for $5 million.
    As previously noted, the District Court ruled that the
    evidence presented through Hughes's testimony was not
    sufficient to create a jury issue either on USA's contract
    claims or its claims of unjust enrichment, and, accordingly,
    granted judgment as a matter of law in favor of CSC and
    Algoma. Our standard of review is plenary; judgment as a
    matter of law is appropriate only "if, viewing the evidence in
    the light most favorable to the nonmovant and giving it the
    advantage of every fair and reasonable inference, there is
    insufficient evidence from which a jury reasonably could
    find liability." Lightning Lube, 
    Inc., 4 F.3d at 1166
    .
    III.
    At the outset, we must make two observations. First,
    although USA's complaint raised numerous causes of
    action, USA appears only to press its breach of contract
    and unjust enrichment claims although none of the other
    causes of action were dismissed prior to trial. During the
    colloquy after defendants moved for judgment as a matter
    of law, the court asked USA what theories of recovery it
    contemplated, and its counsel responded that there were
    "at least two" and then advanced the contract and unjust
    enrichment claims. After oral argument, the court granted
    judgment as a matter of law on all claims against CSC and
    Algoma; there was no further discussion of any of the other
    claims alleged in the complaint. App. at 269-276. On
    appeal, USA presses only its claims of contract and unjust
    9
    enrichment. Accordingly, it appears that all other claims
    were abandoned, and our discussion will be confined to the
    claims discussed by the parties.
    Second, despite the interstate, and indeed international,
    nature of the putative transactions at issue, the parties
    have not chosen to address choice-of-law issues. Algoma
    mentions, in a footnote, that "USA assumes that
    Pennsylvania substantive law applies in this diversity case,
    and Algoma agrees." Appellee Algoma's Brief at 16 n.7.
    Because the parties appear to be in agreement on this
    issue, we will assume, without deciding, that Pennsylvania
    law supplies the appropriate substantive rules.
    A.
    USA argues first that the District Court misapplied the
    law in ruling that there was no evidence to support a
    contract between USA and CSC or between USA and
    Algoma. The parties agree that "the test for enforceability of
    an agreement is whether both parties have manifested an
    intention to be bound by its terms and whether the terms
    are sufficiently definite to be specifically enforced." ATACS
    Corp. v. Trans World Communications, Inc., 
    155 F.3d 659
    ,
    665 (3d Cir. 1998) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Hence our task in reviewing the District Court's grant of
    judgment as a matter of law is to examine the record to
    determine whether the evidence would support a jury's
    finding that the parties to the two putative contracts
    expressed their mutual intent to be bound to terms that are
    sufficiently definite to be enforced.
    However, USA offered no evidence that is consistent with
    the type of contract alleged in the complaint, i.e., that both
    CSC and Algoma agreed to pay USA a "finder's fee" upon
    the completion of any transaction. USA has not pointed to,
    and we have not found in the record, any testimony or
    documents suggesting such an agreement. In fact,
    notwithstanding the complaint, USA's brief states that it
    "did not contend or attempt to prove at trial that the parties
    had a fully-formed and detailed agreement with regard to
    the final purchase and sale of the caster and thefinal
    payment for USA's services." Appellant's Brief at 17. Indeed,
    10
    Hughes testified that he never had any conversations with
    Zalner at CSC about a fee for his services, whether
    connected to the ladles or the caster, App. at 209; that he
    could not specify whether he expected that he would be
    paid in the form of a lump sum, a percentage, or a "spread"
    because "[CSC and Algoma] cut us out of the deal before we
    got to specifics," App. at 194; and that there was ordinarily
    no contract until the final consummation of a sale, App. at
    93.
    We have previously stated in the brokerage context that
    "a broker cannot recover a commission, even though he
    brought the seller and buyer together, unless he can prove
    a contract of employment, express or implied, oral or
    written, between himself and the buyer (or seller) or an
    acceptance and ratification of his acts by the buyer (or
    seller)." Christo v. Ramada Inns, Inc., 
    609 F.2d 1058
    , 1061
    (3d Cir. 1979) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Consequently, there is insufficient evidence in the record,
    when viewed most favorably toward USA, upon which a
    jury could reasonably base a conclusion that USA had an
    agreement with either or both of the defendants under
    which any sale of equipment from Algoma to CSC would
    yield a fee for USA.
    On appeal, USA advances a different theory for its
    contract claim: not that there were contracts by which the
    defendants agreed to pay it a finder's fee but that the
    agreements between the parties were "in the nature of
    agreements to negotiate in good faith." Appellant's Brief at
    16. Further, USA argues, these agreements involved
    promises on the part of CSC and Algoma "to deal with one
    another exclusively through USA and to pay USA a
    reasonable fee if a transaction was later finalized."
    Appellant's Brief at 18.
    We are unpersuaded. To be sure, we have held, under
    Pennsylvania law, that an agreement to negotiate in good
    faith can be enforceable under certain circumstances. See
    Channel Home Centers, Div. of Grace Retail Corp. v.
    Grossman, 
    795 F.2d 291
    , 298-99 (3d Cir. 1986). However,
    our holding in that case was predicated on several
    circumstances that are not present here. In Channel Home
    Centers, the putative agreement between a commercial
    11
    property owner and a prospective lessee whereby the owner
    agreed to withdraw a property from the market during
    negotiations for a lease was embodied in a "detailed" letter
    of intent signed by both parties. 
    Id. at 292.
    We found an
    "unequivocal promise" in the language of the letter, which
    stated: "[t]o induce the Tenant [Channel] to proceed with
    the leasing of the Store, you [Grossman] will withdraw the
    Store form the rental market, and only negotiate the above
    described leasing transaction to completion." 
    Id. at 299.
    Our conclusion that the parties intended to be bound by
    the letter was supported by the preparation of a draft lease,
    architectural planning, zoning applications, and
    correspondence and telephone conversations. 
    Id. This case,
    by contrast, does not present similar indicia of
    intent to be bound, as there is no "detailed" expression of
    the parties' intent. In the case of CSC, the record shows
    that Hughes informed Zalner that USA wished to "register"
    CSC as its customer during a discussion about the nine
    ladles that Algoma owned, and that Zalner said "okay."
    App. at 153. There was no discussion of what "registration"
    entailed, and Hughes acknowledged that he never used the
    term "exclusive" in his negotiations with CSC. App. at 209.
    He also acknowledged that USA had never previously
    consummated a transaction with CSC. Unlike the situation
    in Channel Home Centers, there were also no extensive
    preparations. Hughes merely supplied CSC with some
    information about the caster at CSC's request and
    discussed with Zalner the possibility of a site inspection.
    These circumstances do not suggest that the parties had
    reached the point at which they expressed mutual intent to
    be bound.
    With respect to Algoma, USA offered evidence from which
    a jury could conclude that in a telephone conversation
    between Tucker and Hughes Algoma agreed to accept USA's
    "registration" of CSC as its customer with respect to the
    nine ladles, an agreement memorialized in a letter from
    Hughes to Tucker. But there is nothing in the record to
    suggest that the parties' minds had met on exactly what
    such registration entailed. Although USA had
    consummated transactions with Algoma in the past, and
    had sent Algoma similar registration letters in connection
    12
    with those transactions, there is nothing in the record from
    which a jury could reasonably infer that the parties to the
    prior transactions attached the meaning to those letters
    that USA urges. These prior letters to Algoma provide an
    insufficient explanation of the meaning of registration for a
    jury to infer an agreement to negotiate in good faith of the
    kind that we found cognizable in Channel Home Centers.
    There is insufficient evidence from which a jury could
    draw a reasonable inference that Algoma, as a result of
    these prior dealings, understood that registration meant
    that Algoma agreed to deal exclusively with USA to
    consummate the transaction at issue.
    Nor has USA offered evidence from which a jury could
    conclude that there was an industry custom that would
    support the contract claim. When asked on direct
    examination at what point on "a continuum from
    expressing an initial interest to find a piece of equipment,
    sending information, a site visit, then negotiations," a
    written agreement was entered into, Hughes testified that it
    was "customary . . . that no agreement is made until the
    end." App. at 93. He explained that at the outset he would
    enter into an agreement under which USA would render
    services in exchange for promises from the buyer and seller
    that they would not circumvent USA and deal directly with
    each other. App. at 94. This testimony is insufficient to
    support a finding that it was understood throughout the
    industry that the term "registration" involved an agreement
    of the kind Hughes outlined as his usual practice. In
    addition, Hughes's own testimony of his conversations with
    CSC and Algoma do not support a finding that CSC and
    Algoma would have understood that "registration" involved
    a legally binding promise to deal exclusively with USA,
    particularly because Hughes acknowledged that, although
    he "believed it was understood," he never even used the
    term "exclusive" in those discussions. App. at 209.
    Drawing guidance from our decision in Channel Home
    Centers, we conclude that this lack of specificity is fatal to
    USA's contract claims. Hughes failed to offer evidence that
    any essential term of an agreement to sell the caster was
    reached; the discussion with Tucker and the letter sent to
    him only pertain to the nine ladles, not the caster and
    13
    associated equipment. The fact that the ladles were
    ultimately sold along with the caster and its associated
    equipment does not suggest an agreement of the size and
    scope contended for by USA. And lacking terms for price,
    delivery, or date, or any other indication that the parties
    had manifested a mutual intent to bind themselves to a
    contract of sale, it cannot be said that this agreement was
    one for the sale of the caster, or even of the ladles.
    In sum, we find insufficient   evidence in this case of an
    enforceable agreement either   to negotiate in good faith
    toward the consummation of a   sale transaction or to pay
    Hughes a finder's fee if and   when the sale was made.
    B.
    Arguably, USA's unjust enrichment (quantum meruit)
    claim in Count 5 is stronger than its contract claim, as a
    jury might not have been persuaded by the defendants'
    argument that USA provided no benefit to the parties in
    connection with the ultimate sale of the caster from Algoma
    to CSC. We need not decide that issue because USA's
    unjust enrichment claims (as well as its contract claims)
    cannot succeed because of its failure of proof with respect
    to damages. The District Court stated that damages was
    "the most striking problem" with USA's case. App. at 274.
    We agree.
    To prove damages, USA would have been required to give
    the factfinder evidence upon which it could base a
    calculation of damages to a "reasonable certainty." ATACS
    
    Corp., 155 F.2d at 668
    . "Reasonable certainty" as we have
    stated, "embraces a rough calculation that is not too
    speculative, vague or contingent upon some unknown
    factor." 
    Id. at 669
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    USA's evidence does not supply a basis for a calculation
    of damages that would be anything other than speculative,
    vague, or contingent within the contemplation of our
    ATACS opinion. In the first place, there is no evidence from
    which one might be able to quantify the benefit that USA
    claims to have bestowed upon the parties. Hughes testified
    that his transactions generally were structured such that
    either he negotiated a finder's fee or he would retain as
    14
    profit the spread between the price the seller was willing to
    take from USA and the price that the buyer was willing to
    pay USA.
    As noted above, there was no evidence that a finder's fee
    was negotiated with either of the parties. Nor did USA
    present evidence from which a jury could find a custom in
    the industry with respect to appropriate finder's fees.
    Without evidence that would support a calculation of an
    appropriate finder's fee, or an estimate of Hughes's services
    on an hourly basis, a factfinder would be forced to engage
    in bald conjecture as to the value of USA's services.
    Nor could a factfinder determine damages on the basis of
    a "spread" between the lower limit of what Algoma would
    have accepted for the caster and the upper limit which CSC
    would have paid. Because USA, by its own admissions, had
    not arrived at even an approximation of the price at which
    Algoma was willing to sell and the price at which CSC was
    willing to buy, see App. at 268-69, there is no way for a
    factfinder to determine what, if any, "spread" would result
    from the transactions.
    USA contends that it endeavored to introduce such
    evidence but was prevented from doing so by the District
    Court, an issue we review for abuse of discretion. We find
    USA's contention has no merit. The evidence it sought to
    introduce was merely Hughes's own testimony regarding
    how much he anticipated making from the transaction. See
    App. at 197, 203, 204, 206. The District Court rebuffed
    these efforts on the ground that the witness's subjective
    anticipation was irrelevant. We find no abuse of discretion
    in these rulings.
    USA further urges that the District Court erred in
    refusing to allow Hughes to testify as to what he made in
    other, unrelated transactions. The District Court sustained
    objections to this line of questioning as well, stating:
    There has to be some basis for determining one's
    losses. Either they have to be by agreement or there
    has to be some standard in the industry. It isn't what
    he considered to be the basis . . . . I think it is clear
    that they didn't have an agreement. But it just can't be
    15
    that he picked out some basis and based his opinion
    on it.
    App. at 198. Insofar as USA's counsel did not lay a
    foundation adequate to support the fungibility of
    transactions, we find no abuse of the court's discretion in
    its unwillingness to admit evidence regarding unrelated
    transactions. We note in this regard that Hughes had
    earlier testified, on direct, as follows regarding transactions
    in his business:
    Q. . . . . Is every deal in your business the same ?
    A. No, every deal is different, different structure,
    depending on the customer and the seller. It can be
    structured in a multitude of ways.
    App. at 99. Hence, we agree with the District Court that
    USA's proffer of evidence regarding other transactions was
    insufficiently probative of damages.
    Finally, USA urges that it presented evidence of an
    industry standard sufficient to create a jury issue on
    damages. We disagree. After the District Court had
    informed counsel for plaintiff that Hughes would not be
    allowed to testify as to his anticipated fee for the
    transaction in the absence of any foundation to support it,
    and that evidence of an industry standard would be
    appropriate, the following colloquy with Hughes occurred:
    Q. Are there industry standards in the used steel mill
    industry that pertain to norms on transactions on a
    percentage basis?
    A. Could you be more specific? I am not sure wha t
    kind of sale you are referring to.
    Q. In connection with the sale of a piece of used steel
    mill equipment, are there industry norms or standards
    that you are personally familiar with from your
    experience in the industry as to appropriate percentage
    fee figures as a fee for your services?
    A. The standard that I'm familiar with is the bott om
    line.
    Q. What is that bottom line figure?
    
    16 A. 20
    percent.
    Q. Is that the figure you have utilized in the c ourse of
    your experience over the past 20 years?
    A. Yes.
    App. at 201.
    The import of this testimony was clarified on cross-
    examination, when, after Hughes reiterated that"we keep a
    bottom line of 20 percent," the court began questioning
    Hughes as to what he meant:
    THE COURT: What does it mean, you keep a bottom
    line? Does that mean in every transaction you make at
    least 20 percent?
    THE WITNESS: We start out.
    THE COURT: What does "start out" mean? Do you
    make at least 20 percent on every transaction you do?
    THE WITNESS: We start out with a bottom line of 20
    percent. After negotiation, it's possible to go below that.
    But we start with a bottom line of saying, before we
    quote a price . . . we say, look, this has got to be 20
    percent above the asking price of the seller. Then we
    quote the price. Now it might be 40 percent to start
    with, but the bottom line is 20 percent because if you
    can't do it for 10, you lose money.
    App. at 235. At this point, counsel for Algoma then
    resumed questioning. After establishing that USA has made
    less than ten percent in earlier transactions, counsel asked
    the following:
    Q. So your 20 percent is an internal starting point?
    A. Yes.
    Q. It's an internal as opposed to some kind of industry
    standard; it's an internal USA starting point?
    A. It's an industry standard because I have talked to all
    my counterparts and competitors and that's how they
    view their deals.
    Q. That starting point has nothing to do with where
    ultimately brokers end up in terms of the
    17
    compensation they receive, correct? It could be higher,
    it could be lower, it's across the board?
    A. Yes, uh-huh.
    . . .
    Q. . . . . Do you agree that there is no industry
    standard in determining how much compensation USA
    receives?
    A. Well, if you're asking me, is there a set percentage
    that I make on every deal, the answer is no. There is
    no set percentage.
    . . .
    Q. I am asking, Mr. Hughes, for an industry standard
    with respect to the amount of compensation USA
    ultimately receives on any given deal. There is no
    industry standard is there?
    A. No, I would say every deal is different. I have said
    that in the past. Every deal is different.
    App. at 236-37.
    In light of this testimony, we conclude that the District
    Court did not err in holding that there was no evidence
    upon which a jury could base a finding of damages with the
    "reasonable certainty" required by our decision in ATACS.
    Contrary to USA's protestation that there is an industry
    standard of 20 percent (presumably of the purchase price),
    its only witness acknowledged that this figure is simply the
    starting point for negotiations--the goal that USA seeks to
    accomplish with each deal. The testimony would not
    support a finding that the industry at large recognizes that
    20 percent of the sale price is an appropriate commission
    in the absence of an agreement.
    We therefore agree with the District Court that there was
    a failure of proof on damages. In light of this conclusion,
    there is no need to decide whether, if evidence of damages
    were not lacking, USA satisfied its burden of production
    with respect to liability for unjust enrichment.
    18
    IV.
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the District
    Court will be affirmed.
    A True Copy:
    Teste:
    Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    19