Sharp Electronics v. Deutsche Financial ( 2000 )


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  • PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    SHARP ELECTRONICS CORPORATION,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    No. 99-1555
    DEUTSCHE FINANCIAL SERVICES
    CORPORATION,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Maryland, at Baltimore.
    Andre M. Davis, District Judge.
    (CA-98-253-AMD)
    Argued: April 6, 2000
    Decided: June 20, 2000
    Before NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge, Roger J. MINER,
    Senior Circuit Judge of the United States Court of Appeals
    for the Second Circuit, sitting by designation, and
    Joseph R. GOODWIN, United States District Judge for the
    Southern District of West Virginia, sitting by designation.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Judge Niemeyer wrote
    the opinion, in which Senior Judge Miner and Judge Goodwin joined.
    _________________________________________________________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Peter Neil Wang, FRIEDMAN, WANG & BLEIBERG,
    P.C., New York, New York, for Appellant. Anthony Linn Meagher,
    PIPER & MARBURY, L.L.P., Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellee.
    ON BRIEF: Timothy F. McCormack, David E. Ralph, E. Benjamin
    Alliker, GORDON, FEINBLATT, ROTHMAN, HOFFBERGER &
    HOLLANDER, L.L.C., Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellant. Henry R.
    Lord, Brett Ingerman, PIPER & MARBURY, L.L.P., Baltimore,
    Maryland, for Appellee.
    _________________________________________________________________
    OPINION
    NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge:
    This appeal presents the question under Illinois law of whether a
    finance company may unilaterally modify the terms of a standing
    floorplan financing agreement before it agrees to finance a given
    transaction. Because we hold that the floorplan financing agreement
    in this case was a unilateral contract that did not bind the finance
    company until it undertook to finance a specific transaction, we con-
    clude that the finance company could, as a condition of continuing
    under the arrangement, modify the terms under which it was willing
    to continue to finance transactions. Accordingly, we vacate the dis-
    trict court's judgment entered against the finance company after it
    refused to finance a $1.3 million transaction except on terms that it
    had unilaterally demanded and remand with instructions as specified
    herein.
    I
    Deutsche Financial Services Corporation ("Deutsche Financial")
    and Sharp Electronics Corporation ("Sharp") signed a financing
    agreement, entitled "Floorplan Repurchase Agreement," which pro-
    vided that if Deutsche Financial would agree from time to time to
    finance certain transactions between Sharp and its wholesale custom-
    ers, Sharp would reduce Deutsche Financial's risk by repurchasing
    any financed merchandise that Deutsche Financial might find neces-
    sary to repossess upon default. The agreement was unilateral in that
    Sharp offered Deutsche Financial inducements -- specifically agree-
    ments to reduce its risk -- to provide financing for ongoing transac-
    tions between Sharp and its customers, in this case Montgomery
    2
    Ward & Co., Incorporated ("Montgomery Ward"), but Deutsche
    Financial was not obligated to provide any financing. The agreement
    simply invited Deutsche Financial to accept the inducements by pro-
    viding the financing.
    In particular the agreement provided: "To induce[Deutsche Finan-
    cial] to finance the acquisition of Merchandise by any [customer of
    Sharp]," Sharp agrees that
    (1) It will assure that the underlying transaction is current
    and authentic; that the merchandise is "free and clear
    of all liens"; and that the merchandise is saleable;
    (2) It will assign to Deutsche Financial "the vendor's priv-
    ilege and lien" on merchandise as granted under Loui-
    siana law;
    (3) It will "repurchase such Merchandise from[Deutsche
    Financial] upon demand" and for specified prices
    whenever Deutsche Financial will have a need to
    repossess the merchandise from customers in default.
    And while the agreement invited Deutsche Financial to finance trans-
    actions in response to Sharp's assurances, it specifically did not
    require Deutsche Financial to finance any transaction, providing,
    "This Agreement shall in no way bind [Deutsche Financial] to finance
    any Merchandise for [Sharp's] retail dealers. From time to time
    [Sharp] will inquire as to whether [Deutsche Financial] agree[s] to
    finance Merchandise for certain dealers." Under the agreement,
    Deutsche Financial would be invited to respond to applications or "re-
    quests" made by both Sharp and Montgomery Ward. Only after
    Deutsche Financial approved a specific request to finance a transac-
    tion would it become obligated to complete performance under the
    terms of the Floorplan Repurchase Agreement by paying the invoice
    amount of the proposed transaction less agreed-upon finance charges.
    This obligation to pay, however, was conditioned on (1) Sharp's ship-
    ment of the merchandise to Montgomery Ward within 30 days of
    Deutsche Financial's approval and (2) Deutsche Financial's receipt of
    the invoice for the transaction within 10 days after delivery of the
    merchandise.
    3
    Underlying Deutsche Financial's willingness to approve financing
    under the Floorplan Repurchase Agreement for Montgomery Ward's
    purchases from Sharp was Deutsche Financial's independently
    defined role as administrator of a financial "facility" for Montgomery
    Ward that provided Montgomery Ward with a $100 million line of
    credit.
    Until November 1996, the practice under the Floorplan Repurchase
    Agreement between Deutsche Financial and Sharp with respect to
    Montgomery Ward's purchases routinely took the following form:
    Montgomery Ward would place a purchase order for merchandise
    with Sharp; Sharp would call Deutsche Financial and request an
    approval number for the financing of the merchandise; and Deutsche
    Financial would, if it elected to finance the transaction and if Mont-
    gomery Ward had not yet reached its credit limit with Deutsche
    Financial, orally issue Sharp an approval number. In November 1996,
    the arrangement changed slightly. Thereafter, Sharp would fax
    Deutsche Financial its financing request, and Deutsche Financial
    would fax its approval to Sharp. Sharp would then enter the approval
    number into its computer system, ship the merchandise to Montgom-
    ery Ward, and send the invoice to Deutsche Financial, which would
    pay Sharp.
    In early May 1997, in response to its deteriorating financial condi-
    tion, Montgomery Ward met with its suppliers to discuss its condition
    and its plans to restructure. As part of these plans, Montgomery Ward
    announced its intention to transfer the administration of its line of
    credit from Deutsche Financial to General Electric Capital Corpora-
    tion, a shareholder of Montgomery Ward. Upon the accomplishment
    of that transfer, Deutsche Financial would no longer be financing any
    Montgomery Ward purchases, including those from Sharp. No repre-
    sentative of Sharp attended this meeting, but Sharp's general manager
    learned of it later. He also was aware that General Electric Capital
    had been "getting more involved" with Montgomery Ward and that
    it might "step in either as the lender or the administrator of the floor
    plan program." Based on this knowledge, Sharp's general manager
    recognized the possibility that Sharp "would be requested to do some-
    thing different" with regard to the financing of its sales to Montgom-
    ery Ward.
    4
    Sharp first received formal notice of a change in Montgomery
    Ward's financing arrangements on May 22, 1997, when Montgomery
    Ward faxed it a letter stating: "Effective May 23, 1997, the adminis-
    trator on the inventory finance facility is being changed from
    Deutsche Financial Services to GE Capital. Deutsche will not issue
    approval numbers after May 23, 1997. . . . A copy of GE Capital's
    boilerplate Inventory Repurchase Agreement will be faxed to you on
    Friday, May 23, 1997." On May 23, 1997, Deutsche Financial also
    faxed a letter to Sharp, which Sharp received at 2:17 p.m., announc-
    ing the termination of its financing role and setting deadlines for
    future transactions in light of that termination. Deutsche Financial's
    fax, which was entirely consistent with Montgomery Ward's fax,
    stated in pertinent part:
    Per Montgomery Ward's request, the financing program
    between [Deutsche Financial and] Montgomery Ward . . .
    will change administrators on May 23, 1997, 5:00 PM CST.
    [Deutsche Financial] will continue to review your requests
    for approval numbers until such time, and will continue to
    administer the Program for any invoices dated May 28, 1997
    and earlier. However, any requests for approvals after May
    23, 1997 should be processed through General Electric Cap-
    ital Corporation . . . who will act as the new administrator
    of the Program.
    As [Deutsche Financial] will not administer any invoices
    dated later than May 28, 1997, [Deutsche Financial] hereby
    notifies you that [Deutsche Financial] will revoke each
    approval number which [Deutsche Financial] has issued for
    inventory which you have not shipped to Montgomery Ward
    . . . on or before such date.
    For purposes of this case, the important change announced by
    Deutsche Financial in its May 23 fax was the shortened shipping
    deadline requiring that merchandise be shipped to Montgomery Ward
    by May 28, rather than within 30 days of financing approval.
    Although both Montgomery Ward's May 22 fax and Deutsche Finan-
    cial's May 23 fax were sent to Sharp's general manager, it was
    Sharp's credit administrator who, on May 23, undertook ongoing cor-
    respondence about specific transactions with his counterpart at
    5
    Deutsche Financial. Sharp's credit administrator states that on May 23
    he remained unaware of the faxes from Montgomery Ward and Deut-
    sche Financial announcing the termination of Deutsche Financial's
    financing role.
    Five minutes after Deutsche Financial sent its fax to Sharp's gen-
    eral manager changing the terms under which it would continue to
    finance transactions, Deutsche Financial faxed Sharp's credit admin-
    istrator an approval to finance merchandise worth $56,683, for which
    Sharp had submitted a request for financing approval four days ear-
    lier. In this routine fax to Sharp, Deutsche Financial did not make ref-
    erence to any of the changes transmitted earlier to Sharp's general
    manager. Less than 30 minutes later, at 2:44 p.m., Sharp's credit
    administrator submitted a new request to Deutsche Financial to
    approve financing for almost $2.2 million worth of merchandise that
    Montgomery Ward had ordered. Later that same day, at 4:05 p.m.,
    Deutsche Financial returned a fax approving the financing of this $2.2
    million transaction. Again, Deutsche Financial's approval did not
    make reference to the changes in the financing arrangement.
    Because Sharp's general manager had been on vacation on May 23,
    1997, he did not see the two faxes, one from Montgomery Ward and
    the other from Deutsche Financial, announcing changes in the financ-
    ing relationship, until May 27. On that day, after reading Deutsche
    Financial's May 23 fax, Sharp's general manager discussed the
    changes in financing procedures with Sharp's credit administrator,
    although the general manager later conceded he "wasn't focused" on
    the statement in Deutsche Financial's letter notifying Sharp that
    Deutsche Financial would "revoke each approval number which it has
    issued for inventory which [Sharp has] not shipped to Montgomery
    Ward . . . on or before [the May 28 deadline]."
    On May 28, Sharp shipped Montgomery Ward $945,488 worth of
    merchandise that had been approved for financing by Deutsche Finan-
    cial on May 23. The remaining $1.3 million worth of merchandise
    that had also been approved on May 23 was shipped on May 31, three
    days after the deadline imposed by Deutsche Financial in its May 23
    fax. When Sharp submitted invoices for these two shipments,
    Deutsche Financial financed the merchandise shipped on May 28 but
    refused to finance the shipment made on May 31. Because Montgom-
    6
    ery Ward later defaulted on its obligation to pay Sharp for the mer-
    chandise and subsequently filed for bankruptcy, Sharp was not paid
    for approximately $1.3 million worth of merchandise.
    In January 1998, Sharp filed this diversity-jurisdiction action
    against Deutsche Financial for breach of the Floorplan Repurchase
    Agreement. It alleged that it had complied with the agreement and
    that Deutsche Financial's attempted modification of the agreement on
    May 23, 1997, was invalid. Sharp demanded more than $1.3 million
    in damages, the value of the merchandise shipped on May 31, 1997,
    plus interest and costs.
    On Sharp's motion for summary judgment, the district court
    entered judgment in favor of Sharp in the amount of $1,394,705.11,
    which included approximately $97,000 of prejudgment interest. In
    ruling in Sharp's favor, the court concluded that Deutsche Financial
    had breached the Floorplan Repurchase Agreement with Sharp. The
    district court, applying Illinois law because Deutsche Financial had
    received and approved Sharp's request to finance the $2.2 million
    transaction (which included the $1.3 million shipment) in that state,
    ruled that the agreement between the parties had not been effectively
    modified because a valid modification requires an offer, acceptance,
    and consideration. The court found that in the circumstances before
    it: (1) Deutsche Financial's attempted modification was not supported
    by valid consideration because Deutsche Financial had preexisting
    obligations, and (2) Sharp had not accepted Deutsche Financial's
    offer by performance because Sharp's actions were consistent with
    the preexisting agreement. In response to Deutsche Financial's argu-
    ment that Sharp had failed to mitigate its damages by shipping the
    merchandise to Montgomery Ward after the May 28 deadline with
    full knowledge of the deadline, the court concluded that Deutsche
    Financial had not notified Sharp in its May 23 fax of an unequivocal
    intention to breach the existing arrangement.
    This appeal followed.
    II
    In the broadest view, the Floorplan Repurchase Agreement in this
    case was an agreement between the parties establishing the underly-
    7
    ing terms that would apply if and when Deutsche Financial agreed to
    finance a transaction. Until Deutsche Financial"approved" a transac-
    tion for financing, it had no obligation to finance any transaction.
    Similarly, Sharp had no obligation to request Deutsche Financial's
    financing, although it did have the obligations set forth in the Floor-
    plan Repurchase Agreement if Deutsche Financial approved a
    request. Thus, even if Sharp met all the criteria established for
    approval of a transaction, it could not compel Deutsche Financial to
    agree to finance any transaction; it could not even demand an expla-
    nation if Deutsche Financial refused to approve a transaction.
    Stated otherwise, the Floorplan Repurchase Agreement was a set
    of terms offered by Sharp to "induce" -- the term used in the docu-
    ment -- Deutsche Financial to agree to finance transactions by reduc-
    ing Deutsche Financial's credit risk and shifting some of that risk to
    Sharp through Sharp's agreement to repurchase repossessed inven-
    tory, hence the agreement's title, Floorplan Repurchase Agreement.
    Deutsche Financial's risk was also lessened by Sharp's assurances
    that a current, bona fide transaction was being financed; that the mer-
    chandise being financed was saleable; and that Sharp would assign
    certain vendor's rights to Deutsche Financial.
    In contractual terms, the Floorplan Repurchase Agreement was a
    unilateral promise by Sharp that invited Deutsche Financial's accep-
    tance by performance -- i.e., by financing transactions. Traditionally,
    this type of arrangement is characterized as a unilateral contract, a
    contract in which the promise is binding only on the promisor. See,
    e.g., Central Nat'l Bank & Trust Co. v. Consumers Constr. Co., 
    282 N.E.2d 158
    , 162 (Ill. App. 1972) (recognizing that a unilateral con-
    tract may be accepted by performance); E. Allan Farnsworth, Con-
    tracts § 3.4, at 115 (2d ed. 1990) ("In forming a unilateral contract
    only one party makes a promise: the offeror makes the promise con-
    tained in the offer, and the offeree renders some performance as
    acceptance"); 1 Samuel Williston, A Treatise on the Law of Contracts
    § 1:17, at 44-46 (Richard A. Lord ed., 4th ed. 1990). But, because this
    "unilateral" classification has often produced confusion in the analysis
    of hybrid situations, the Restatement (Second) of Contracts has aban-
    doned rigid characterizations based on the term and has described the
    traditional unilateral contract in other ways under various subjects.
    See, e.g., Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 1 cmt. f (1981)
    8
    (Reporter's Note) (explaining that because "unilateral contract" tradi-
    tionally referred to three different types of transactions, the term was
    "productive of confusion"); id. § 25 (option contracts); id. § 30(1)
    (offers inviting acceptance by performance); see also Lomas Mort-
    gage U.S.A., Inc. v. W.E. O'Neil Constr. Co., 
    812 F. Supp. 841
    , 843
    (N.D. Ill. 1993) (citing Illinois cases that rely on the Restatement
    (Second) of Contracts and noting that Illinois courts "customarily"
    follow them). The flexible approach recommended by the Second
    Restatement, while more adaptable to various types of transactions,
    does not abandon the traditional notion that under a unilateral con-
    tract, as long as the promisor holds open his offer inviting acceptance
    by performance, the promisee can bind the promisor by such perfor-
    mance. See Restatement (Second) of Contracts§ 53(1) (acceptance by
    performance); id. § 54(1) (when offer is accepted by performance, no
    notification of acceptance required); see also 1 Williston § 1:17, at
    45. While principles of "purely" unilateral contracts are most often
    applied to offers of a reward or of a price for goods or services, id.
    § 1:17, at 44-45, they also apply to financing, such as credit-card
    financing, where the finance company, through the provision of an
    underlying unilateral agreement, makes an offer to finance its custom-
    er's purchases of merchandise if the customer uses the card. Until the
    customer uses the card, the finance company may cancel its financing
    offer. But once a customer uses the card to make a purchase, the
    finance company becomes obligated to finance that purchase. See
    Garber v. Harris Trust & Sav. Bank, 
    432 N.E.2d 1309
    , 1311 (Ill.
    App. 1982) (holding that issuance of a credit card is only an offer to
    extend credit, which is accepted upon each purchase by credit-card
    owner).
    These well-established contract principles readily describe and
    govern this case. Until Deutsche Financial accepted Sharp's offer by
    beginning its performance, i.e., by agreeing to finance a transaction,
    Sharp could have withdrawn from the arrangement or altered the
    terms of its offer to Deutsche Financial. And this freedom from obli-
    gation continued even after Sharp submitted a request for approval,
    so long as Deutsche Financial had not given its approval. See, e.g.,
    Andros v. Hansen Realty Co., 
    358 N.E.2d 664
    , 667 (Ill. App. 1976)
    ("a unilateral agreement can be cancelled at any time before perfor-
    mance by the other party"). Similarly, at any time before its approval,
    Deutsche Financial could have demanded different assurances or
    9
    terms as a condition to future financing. If Sharp refused, Deutsche
    Financial could have correspondingly refused to finance any transac-
    tion and withdrawn from the arrangement. See, e.g., Western Springs
    Park Dist. v. Lawrence, 
    175 N.E. 579
    , 580 (Ill. 1931) (recognizing
    that offer is not binding until acceptance). Until Deutsche Financial
    approved a specific request, either party could cancel the arrangement
    or condition its participation in future transactions.
    When Deutsche Financial approved a transaction for financing,
    however, it began its performance, thereby accepting Sharp's offer
    and binding Sharp to the terms of the offer. Deutsche Financial simi-
    larly bound itself to complete performance by agreeing to finance the
    transaction under the terms of the underlying arrangement. The Floor-
    plan Repurchase Agreement makes this explicit:
    Upon [Deutsche Financial's] approval to provide such
    financing, via telephone or other means, [Deutsche Finan-
    cial] will be obligated to pay [Sharp] an amount equal to the
    invoice price for such Merchandise, less the amount of
    [Deutsche Financial's] charges as agreed upon from time to
    time, if the Merchandise is shipped to the dealer within
    thirty (30) days from the date of [Deutsche Financial's]
    approval and [Deutsche Financial has] received[Sharp's]
    invoice for such Merchandise within ten (10) days from the
    date of delivery of the Merchandise to the dealer.
    (Emphasis added). While Deutsche Financial, with its approval of
    Sharp's request, became obligated to finance the transaction, its com-
    pletion of performance -- its payment for the merchandise -- was
    nevertheless required only if (1) Sharp shipped the merchandise to
    Montgomery Ward within 30 days of its approval and (2) Deutsche
    Financial received an invoice for the merchandise within 10 days after
    delivery.
    In the parlance of contract law, Deutsche Financial's obligation to
    complete performance -- by financing the transaction after its
    approval -- was subject to conditions. The Restatement defines a
    condition as "an event, not certain to occur, which must occur . . .
    before performance under a contract becomes due" and notes that
    "[p]erformance of a duty subject to a condition cannot become due
    10
    unless the condition occurs." Restatement (Second) of Contracts
    §§ 224, 225(1). As such, although Deutsche Financial's approval con-
    stituted acceptance through performance, such approval was merely
    partial performance, and Deutsche Financial's complete performance
    was conditional on additional acts by Sharp. See Vuagniaux v. Korte,
    
    652 N.E.2d 840
    , 842-43 (Ill. App. 1995) (discussing conditions
    which, if not fulfilled, preclude contractual liability).
    On May 23, 1997, before Deutsche Financial approved any trans-
    action and therefore before it became obligated to do anything under
    the Floorplan Repurchase Agreement, Deutsche Financial announced
    that any future financing would be subject to new conditions -- perti-
    nently, the requirement of shipment within 30 days became a require-
    ment of shipment by May 28. Because this May 23 fax controlled
    Deutsche Financial's future acceptance of Sharp's standing offer (rep-
    resented by the Floorplan Repurchase Agreement) and because
    Deutsche Financial purported to condition acceptance of the offer on
    the condition that its changes be made, the May 23 fax must be
    treated as a rejection of Sharp's standing offer and as a counteroffer
    on new terms. See Hubble v. O'Connor, 
    684 N.E.2d 816
    , 821 (Ill.
    App. 1997) ("An acceptance conditioned on the modification of terms
    in an offer generally constitutes a rejection of the offer and becomes
    a counter-offer that the original offeror must accept before a valid
    contract is established"); Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 59 ("A
    reply to an offer which purports to accept it but is conditional on the
    offeror's assent to terms additional to or different from those offered
    is not an acceptance but is a counter-offer"); id. § 36(1)(a) (indicating
    that a counteroffer by the offeree may terminate the offeree's power
    to accept the original offer); id. § 39 (defining a counteroffer as "an
    offer made by an offeree to his offeror relating to the same matter as
    the original offer and proposing a substituted bargain differing from
    that proposed by the original offer").
    The role of the Floorplan Repurchase Agreement as a standing
    offer to enter into a number of financing contracts does not alter this
    analysis. See Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 31 ("An offer may
    propose . . . the formation of a number of contracts by successive
    acceptances from time to time"). This is because individual contracts
    formed on the underlying offer for multiple contracts are analyzed
    individually as divisible contracts. See Restatement (Second) of Con-
    11
    tracts § 47 (indicating that a standing offer contemplating "a series of
    independent contracts" may be revoked "so as to terminate the power
    to create future contracts," even though other contracts have already
    been entered into pursuant to the standing offer); see also Kling Bros.
    Engineering Works v. Whiting Corp., 
    51 N.E.2d 1004
    , 1008 (Ill. App.
    1943) ("an offer of . . . divisible character may be revoked not only
    before any acceptance but also as to any portion of the offer still
    unaccepted").
    The nature of Deutsche Financial's counteroffer included in the
    May 23 fax was clear. Deutsche Financial was terminating its under-
    lying financing relationship with Montgomery Ward and would no
    longer approve transactions for financing after May 23. Deutsche
    Financial further indicated that it would not finance any transaction
    with an invoice date or shipment date after May 28. In essence,
    Deutsche Financial was offering to continue for a short time under the
    underlying Floorplan Repurchase Agreement as long as its new con-
    ditions applied, and it was inviting Sharp and Montgomery Ward to
    submit new transactions for financing subject to those conditions. In
    contract language, Deutsche Financial extended a counteroffer to
    Sharp that could be accepted by Sharp's performance-- i.e., by
    Sharp's further submission of financing requests.
    The legal effect of Deutsche Financial's May 23 counteroffer was
    rejection of Sharp's standing offer, which terminated Deutsche Finan-
    cial's ability to bind Sharp on the original terms. See Restatement
    (Second) of Contracts § 36; see also OnTap Premium Quality Waters,
    Inc. v. Bank of N. Ill., 
    634 N.E.2d 425
    , 429 (Ill. App. 1994) ("It is
    well established that an acceptance requiring any modification or
    change of terms constitutes a rejection of an original offer"); Sementa
    v. Tylman, 
    595 N.E.2d 688
    , 692 (Ill. App. 1992) ("A rejected offer
    cannot be revived by a later acceptance"). Thus, the original terms of
    the Floorplan Repurchase Agreement were terminated, and neither
    party could unilaterally revive it.
    Deutsche Financial's May 23 rejection of the standing offer in the
    Floorplan Repurchase Agreement and its termination of its own
    power of acceptance occurred upon Sharp's receipt of the counterof-
    fer from Deutsche Financial, not when knowledge of the communica-
    tion's contents could be imputed to the addressee or anyone else. See
    12
    Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 40 (counteroffer terminates the
    power of acceptance when "received" by the original offeror); id. § 68
    (receipt occurs when the "writing comes into the possession of the
    person addressed, or some person authorized by him to receive it for
    him, or when it is deposited in some place which he has authorized
    as the place for this or similar communications to be deposited for
    him"). Identifying receipt as the objective manifestation of when
    rejection occurs is necessary for determining contracting liability. It
    permits an offeror an objective mechanism to revoke an offer and,
    similarly, permits an objective mechanism by which an offeree can
    reject an offer. In these circumstances, receipt leads not to the forma-
    tion of a contract, but to its demise, and therefore, knowledge of the
    contents of a communication, which otherwise might be necessary for
    a meeting of minds to form a contract, need not be imputed to the par-
    ties for the revocation or rejection of an offer to become effective.
    In sum, Deutsche Financial effectively rejected the standing Floor-
    plan Repurchase Agreement -- which may essentially be understood
    as a termination unless Sharp agreed to new conditions -- at 2:17
    p.m. on May 23 when the fax was received by Sharp, addressed to its
    general manager. This was the person with whom communications
    between the companies regarding the terms of the Floorplan Repur-
    chase Agreement had taken place; the general manager was also the
    person to whom Montgomery Ward sent its fax a day earlier announc-
    ing the termination of its relationship with Deutsche Financial. See
    Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 68 & cmt. a (noting that receipt
    of a communication does not require that it have been read or even
    that it have reached the hands of the addressee). Thus, unless Sharp
    thereafter acceded to the new conditions demanded by Deutsche
    Financial -- or, stated otherwise, unless Sharp accepted Deutsche
    Financial's counteroffer of May 23 -- the Floorplan Repurchase
    Agreement came to an end on May 23 when Sharp received Deutsche
    Financial's fax.
    Sharp does not appear to take issue with this conclusion. It agrees
    that Deutsche Financial's May 23 fax contained a counteroffer but
    argues that it never agreed to the new conditions contained in the fax.
    Sharp's core argument is that it cannot be deemed to have accepted
    Deutsche Financial's counteroffer without an awareness of the fax's
    contents. It contends that at the time it requested Deutsche Financial's
    13
    approval for ongoing financing later on May 23, it did not have effec-
    tive notice of the modifications demanded by Deutsche Financial. In
    support of this contention, Sharp gives three reasons why notice was
    defective. First, Sharp contends that notice of the counteroffer was
    inadequate because it was received less than one-half hour before
    Sharp requested approval for the $2.2 million transaction. Second, it
    points out that Deutsche Financial's fax was sent to Sharp's general
    manager, whereas it was Sharp's credit administrator who processed
    financing approvals. Finally, it notes that the general manager, to
    whom the May 23 fax was sent, did not receive actual notice of it
    until four days later, on May 27 when he returned from vacation.
    Sharp may have identified a legitimate factual question about
    whether it had effective notice of the contents of Deutsche Financial's
    counteroffer so as to be able to accept it by performance that same
    day. This factual issue, however, need not be resolved. Rather,
    because of Sharp's actual knowledge of the counteroffer on May 27
    and its performance thereafter in shipping $2.2 million worth of mer-
    chandise to Montgomery Ward, this case may be decided as a matter
    of law on an established principle of contract law.
    When an offeree, who has performed partly, continues performance
    requested by the offer after learning of the offer, it accepts the offer
    by completing the requested performance, even if it did not know of
    the offer when it first began to perform. See Restatement (Second) of
    Contracts § 51 ("Unless the offeror manifests a contrary intention, an
    offeree who learns of an offer after he has rendered part of the perfor-
    mance requested by the offer may accept by completing the requested
    performance"); see also Plumb v. Campbell, 
    18 N.E. 790
    , 792 (Ill.
    1888) (party can be bound to unilateral contract"in [any] of three
    ways: First, by . . . engaging within a reasonable time to perform the
    contract on his part; second, by beginning such performance in a way
    which would bind him to complete it; and, third, by actual perfor-
    mance"); In re Marriage of Sherrick, 
    573 N.E.2d 335
    , 337 (Ill. App.
    1991) ("Conduct, including an acceptance of benefits under a con-
    tract, may be sufficient to constitute a ratification binding on the party
    accepting the benefits as if the party had signed the contract"). This
    principle embodied in § 51 of the Restatement resolves the case at
    hand. Even if Sharp began the performance invited by Deutsche
    Financial's counteroffer by requesting the $2.2 million of financing
    14
    without knowledge that the "old deal" had been terminated and that
    new conditions had been demanded, its core actions continuing per-
    formance in the manner invited by the offer -- i.e., the shipping of
    merchandise -- occurred after it had actual knowledge of Deutsche
    Financial's counteroffer. Sharp does not dispute that by May 27, its
    general manager had actually read Deutsche Financial's fax and dis-
    cussed it with Sharp's credit administrator. And at that point, Sharp
    could have withdrawn from Deutsche Financial's proposed arrange-
    ment and refused to ship any merchandise without risk. Sharp's gen-
    eral manager had become aware that the old deal was done and that
    Sharp could continue only under the counteroffer. But instead of indi-
    cating its nonagreement with the counteroffer, Sharp began shipping
    all of the merchandise covered by the approved $2.2 million transac-
    tion, with full notice of Deutsche Financial's May 28 deadline. Some
    merchandise was shipped on May 28 within the deadline, but $1.3
    million worth of merchandise was shipped on May 31, after the May
    28 deadline. In short, the record indisputably establishes that at the
    time Sharp began shipping the $2.2 million worth of merchandise to
    Montgomery Ward -- $1.3 million worth of which it seeks reim-
    bursement in this suit -- it had actual notice of Deutsche Financial's
    counteroffer. Nevertheless, it elected to continue its performance,
    thereby accepting that counteroffer.
    Accordingly, we hold that the financing that was approved after
    Sharp received Deutsche Financial's May 23 fax is governed by the
    terms of the May 23 fax and that Deutsche Financial therefore did not
    breach the Floorplan Repurchase Agreement when it refused to
    finance the $1.3 million worth of merchandise Sharp shipped after
    May 28, contrary to the conditions offered on May 23 and accepted
    by Sharp's continuing performance.
    The equities of this situation also militate against any different con-
    clusion. Sharp was aware that Deutsche Financial was withdrawing its
    financial support from Montgomery Ward and that General Electric
    Capital Corporation might replace it. Sharp also received actual notice
    on May 27, if not before, that the transition from Deutsche Financial
    to General Electric Capital would be effective May 28 and that
    Deutsche Financial would not be financing any shipments made after
    that date. Sharp thus plainly assumed the risk that Montgomery Ward
    would not be able to pay for the merchandise that it had ordered and
    15
    that Sharp shipped on May 31. The fact that Sharp consciously under-
    took that risk is indicated by further unrelated transactions for the sale
    of merchandise that Sharp entered into directly with Montgomery
    Ward after May 28. It would challenge any notion of fairness to let
    Sharp shed the risk it assumed of Montgomery Ward's poor credit
    now that Montgomery Ward has filed a petition in bankruptcy.
    Our determination that Deutsche Financial was not contractually
    obligated to finance the $1.3 million worth of merchandise, which
    formed the basis for Sharp's claim, leads to the legal conclusion that,
    on Sharp's complaint and the undisputed facts of record, Deutsche
    Financial is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Accordingly, we
    vacate the district court's judgment and remand with instructions to
    enter judgment in favor of Deutsche Financial.
    VACATED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS
    16