Volvo Construction Equipment North America, Inc. v. CLM Equipment Co. ( 2004 )


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  •                             PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT            
    NORTH AMERICA, INC., a Delaware
    corporation; VOLVO TRADEMARK
    HOLDING AKTIEBOLAGET, a Swedish
    corporation; CHAMPION ROAD
    MACHINERY LIMITED, a Canadian
    corporation,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    v.
    CLM EQUIPMENT COMPANY, INC., a
    Louisiana corporation; FUTURE
    EQUIPMENT COMPANY, INC., a Texas                  No. 03-1108
    corporation, CLARK MACHINERY
    COMPANY, an Arkansas corporation,
    Defendants-Appellants,
    and
    AIS CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT
    CORPORATION, a Michigan
    corporation; NUECES FARM CENTER,
    INC., d/b/a Nueces Power
    Equipment, a Delaware corporation,
    Defendants.
    
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of North Carolina, at Asheville.
    Lacy H. Thornburg, District Judge.
    (CA-00-238-1; CA-01-232-1)
    Argued: September 24, 2003
    Decided: October 8, 2004
    2              VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    Before WIDENER, TRAXLER, and KING, Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded by published opinion.
    Judge King wrote the opinion, in which Judge Traxler joined. Judge
    Widener wrote an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part.
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Scott E. Korzenowski, DADY & GARNER, P.A., Minne-
    apolis, Minnesota, for Appellants. Michael J. Lockerby, HUNTON &
    WILLIAMS, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: J.
    Michael Dady, Ronald K. Gardner, DADY & GARNER, P.A., Min-
    neapolis, Minnesota; Robert B. Delano, Jr., SANDS, ANDERSON,
    MARKS & MILLER, Richmond, Virginia; Edward L. Bleynat, Jr.,
    FERIKES & BLEYNAT, P.L.L.C., Asheville, North Carolina, for
    Appellants. Kimberley A. Isbell, HUNTON & WILLIAMS, Rich-
    mond, Virginia; Nash E. Long, III, HUNTON & WILLIAMS, Char-
    lotte, North Carolina, for Appellees.
    OPINION
    KING, Circuit Judge:
    Three retail dealers of large earth-moving motor graders (the "Deal-
    ers")1 appeal the district court’s decision in favor of the graders’ man-
    ufacturers (collectively, "Volvo")2 in this contract dispute. Volvo
    Trademark Holding Aktiebolaget v. CLM Equip. Co., Inc., 
    236 F. 1
         The Dealers are CLM Equipment Company, Inc., a Louisiana corpo-
    ration, Clark Machinery Company, an Arkansas corporation, and Future
    Equipment Company, Inc., a Texas corporation.
    2
    The three appellees, referred to as Volvo, are Volvo Construction
    Equipment North America, Inc., a Delaware corporation, Volvo Trade-
    mark Holding Aktiebolaget, a Swedish corporation, and Champion Road
    Machinery Limited, a Canadian corporation.
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                   3
    Supp. 2d 536 (W.D.N.C. 2002) (the "Opinion"). The Dealers maintain
    that the court lacked jurisdiction in the declaratory judgment proceed-
    ing initiated by Volvo because no actual controversy existed. The
    Dealers also assert that, even if the court possessed jurisdiction, it
    abused its discretion by exercising jurisdiction in that proceeding.
    Finally, the Dealers contend that the court erroneously ruled in favor
    of Volvo on the merits of this dispute, in that Volvo’s refusal to sup-
    ply them with equipment constituted a breach of its contractual obli-
    gations and contravened several state statutes. For the reasons
    explained below, we affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand.
    I.
    A.
    Prior to being purchased by Volvo in 1997, Champion Road
    Machinery Limited ("Champion") was a Canadian corporation spe-
    cializing in the manufacture of large earth-moving motor graders (the
    "Champion Motor Graders").3 The contract dispute underlying this lit-
    igation emanates from Volvo’s 1997 purchase of Champion and
    Volvo’s subsequent decision to cease supplying Champion Motor
    Graders to the Dealers — CLM Equipment Company, Inc. ("CLM"),
    Clark Machinery Company ("Clark"), and Future Equipment Com-
    pany, Inc. ("FEC") — for resale. That decision resulted in what the
    Dealers contend was Volvo’s unlawful termination of their dealer
    agreements with Champion (the "Dealer Agreements").4 According to
    the Dealers, Champion promised them, during a 1970s effort to
    increase its dealerships in this country, that it would "continue a busi-
    ness relationship with a dealer unless the dealer was having financial
    difficulties or was performing poorly." The Dealers allege that Cham-
    3
    Because we are reviewing an award of judgment on the pleadings, our
    factual recitation is presented in the light most favorable to the nonmov-
    ing party (i.e., the Dealers). George C. Frey Ready-Mixed Concrete, Inc.
    v. Pall Hill Concrete Mix Corp., 
    554 F.2d 551
    , 553 (2d Cir. 1977); 5A
    Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Proce-
    dure § 1368 (2d ed. 1990).
    4
    The three Dealer Agreements at issue are entitled "Distributor Sales
    Agreement[s]" (CLM and Clark) and "Grader Dealer Agreement" (FEC).
    We refer to each as a Dealer Agreement.
    4             VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    pion promised to terminate a Champion dealer "only after first giving
    the dealer notice of its deficiencies and an opportunity to correct those
    deficiencies." The Dealers maintain that Champion representatives
    also made contemporaneous oral representations that the Dealers
    could continue as Champion dealers so long as they adequately per-
    formed. This contract dispute relates primarily to the interpretation
    and application of a specific subsection of the Termination section of
    the Dealer Agreements. That subsection, the "Without Cause Provi-
    sion," authorizes termination of a dealership without cause, providing
    as follows:
    Champion may terminate this agreement at any time without
    cause by written notice of termination delivered to [Dealer
    or Distributor], such termination to be effective not less than
    sixty (60) days after receipt or deemed receipt by Dealer of
    such notice.
    CLM, Clark, and FEC Dealer Agreements § 24.4. Although the With-
    out Cause Provision is important in this appeal, several other provi-
    sions of the Dealer Agreements are also significant. They include:
    • a merger and integration clause (the "Integration
    Clause"), providing that a Dealer Agreement contains the
    entire agreement respecting a Dealer’s purchase and dis-
    tribution of Champion products and parts; CLM and
    Clark Dealer Agreements § 32.1, FEC Dealer Agreement
    § 33.1;
    • a clause prohibiting oral modification (the "Modification
    Clause"), providing that any modification of a Dealer
    Agreement must be in writing and signed by a duly
    authorized officer of Champion; CLM and Clark Dealer
    Agreements § 32.2, FEC Dealer Agreement § 33.2;
    • a market withdrawal provision (the "Market Withdrawal
    Provision"), pursuant to which Champion reserves the
    right to discontinue its product lines without notice to the
    Dealers; CLM, Clark, and FEC Dealer Agreements § 27;
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                 5
    • a best efforts provision (the "Best Efforts Provision"),
    under which the Dealers agree to use their best efforts to
    sell Champion products; CLM and Clark Dealer Agree-
    ments § 6, FEC Dealer Agreement § 7;
    • a choice-of-law provision (the "Choice-of-Law Provi-
    sion"), providing that, pursuant to CLM’s and Clark’s
    Dealer Agreements, the obligations of the parties are to
    be determined under South Carolina law; CLM and
    Clark Dealer Agreements § 29; and that, pursuant to
    FEC’s Dealer Agreement, the obligations of the parties
    are to be governed by the law of Ontario; FEC Dealer
    Agreement § 29; and
    • a conformity with local laws provision (the "Local Law
    Provision"), under which the rights and obligations of the
    parties are subject to all applicable laws of government
    entities having jurisdiction over them, and providing
    that, if local law substantially alters relationships under
    a Dealer Agreement, a party may request modification of
    the Agreement; CLM, Clark, and FEC Dealer Agree-
    ments § 30.
    After consummating its purchase of Champion, Volvo decided that
    it could compete more effectively with such manufacturers as Case,
    Caterpillar, John Deere, and Komatsu if it marketed motor graders
    under a single brand name (i.e., Volvo) and through a single dealer
    network (i.e., that of Volvo).5 As a result, Volvo implemented a plan
    to "Volvoize" its products and "rationalize" its dealer network. Volvo
    characterized the "Volvoization" program as a process of reengineer-
    ing and rebranding Champion Motor Graders for sale under the
    VOLVO trademark. Volvo characterized its "Dealer Rationalization"
    plan as the integration of the Volvo and Champion dealer networks.
    In 2000, the Dealers responded to Volvo’s plan by demanding that
    Volvo continue to provide them with motor graders manufactured by
    5
    According to Volvo, its competing manufacturers typically market a
    full line of construction equipment, and their dealers offer "one-stop
    shopping" for such products.
    6            VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    Volvo at the former Champion factory. Despite these demands, the
    Dealers were not selected by Volvo as authorized dealers of such
    motor graders, and Volvo notified the Dealers that it would no longer
    supply them with Champion Motor Graders. On January 19, 2000,
    FEC received notice that its Dealer Agreement would be terminated
    on March 19, 2000. On October 10, 2000, Volvo notified Clark and
    CLM that their Dealer Agreements would be terminated on January
    9, 2001. Upon receipt of these termination notices, the Dealers
    advised Volvo that they would litigate all efforts to terminate the
    Dealer Agreements. In January 2001, after receipt of such advice
    from the Dealers, Volvo ceased manufacturing Champion brand
    motor graders.
    B.
    On October 10, 2000, Volvo filed its declaratory judgment com-
    plaint in the Western District of North Carolina (the "North Carolina
    Litigation"), naming as defendants CLM, FEC, AIS Construction
    Equipment Corporation ("AIS"), and certain other Champion dealers,
    including Nueces Farm Center, Inc. ("NFC"). By this civil action,
    Volvo sought a declaration that, pursuant to the Dealer Agreements,
    it was not obliged to continue supplying Champion Motor Graders to
    Champion dealers. On November 27, 2000, the defendants sought dis-
    missal of the North Carolina Litigation for lack of subject-matter
    jurisdiction. In response, Volvo amended its declaratory judgment
    complaint and, inter alia, named Clark as an additional defendant. On
    March 19, 2001, before the district court addressed the jurisdictional
    issue, Volvo sought leave to amend its complaint for a second time,
    dropping defendant NFC from the North Carolina Litigation and
    asserting diversity jurisdiction in the North Carolina court.6
    On March 20, 2001, the Dealers filed a separate civil action against
    Volvo in the Eastern District of Arkansas (the "Arkansas Litigation").
    The Dealers then moved the North Carolina court to dismiss, abstain
    from, or stay the North Carolina Litigation, in deference to the Arkan-
    6
    Both Volvo and NFC are Delaware corporations. NFC, as a defen-
    dant, would have destroyed diversity in the North Carolina Litigation.
    See 28 U.S.C. § 1332. With NFC no longer a defendant in the North Car-
    olina Litigation, no diversity issue is raised, and none is apparent.
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                  7
    sas Litigation (the "Dealers’ Motion"). On April 9, 2001, a magistrate
    judge in North Carolina recommended to the district court that the
    Dealers’ Motion be denied and that Volvo be authorized to file its
    Second Amended Complaint. Volvo Trademark Holding Aktiebolaget
    v. AIS Const. Equip. Corp., No. 1:00CV238 (W.D.N.C. April 9,
    2002).
    On April 20, 2001, Volvo moved the Arkansas court to dismiss,
    abstain from, or stay the Arkansas Litigation, in deference to the
    North Carolina Litigation. On June 21, 2001, the Arkansas court
    granted that motion, entering a stay of the Arkansas Litigation pend-
    ing resolution of the Dealers’ Motion in North Carolina. On August
    27, 2001, the North Carolina court, relying on the magistrate judge’s
    recommendation, denied the Dealers’ Motion, granted Volvo leave to
    voluntarily dismiss NFC as a defendant, and authorized Volvo to file
    its Second Amended Complaint (the "Complaint"). Volvo Trademark,
    No. 1:00CV238 (W.D.N.C. Aug. 27, 2001).7
    Upon being advised of the North Carolina court’s ruling on the
    Dealers’ Motion, the Arkansas court, on August 30, 2001, transferred
    the Arkansas Litigation to the Western District of North Carolina.
    Thereafter, on September 14, 2001, the Dealers filed their Joint
    Answer and Counterclaim in the North Carolina Litigation. Their
    Counterclaim mirrored the claims asserted in their complaint against
    Volvo in the Arkansas Litigation.8 On January 9, 2002, the parties
    7
    Volvo’s Second Amended Complaint in the North Carolina Litigation
    sought the following: (1) a declaration pursuant to the Lanham Act (15
    U.S.C. § 1051, et seq.) of trademark infringement, unfair competition,
    and dilution; (2) a declaration that the Lanham Act preempted any state
    law claims that were inconsistent therewith; (3) a declaration that there
    had been no breach of contract by Volvo; (4) a declaration that there are
    no ancillary tort law claims against Volvo; and (5) a declaration that
    Volvo had not violated any state statutes. Volvo’s Second Amended
    Complaint is the operative complaint in this appeal.
    8
    The Dealers asserted twelve claims against Volvo in the Arkansas Lit-
    igation and in the North Carolina Litigation. Those claims were for (1)
    violations of the Arkansas Franchise Practices Act, Ark. Code § 4-72-
    201, et seq.; (2) violations of the Texas Farm, Industrial and Outdoor
    Power Equipment Dealer Act, Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 19.01, et seq.;
    8             VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    consented to consolidation of the Arkansas Litigation with the North
    Carolina Litigation in the North Carolina court. Volvo Trademark,
    No. 1:00CV238, No. 1:01CV122 (W.D.N.C. Jan. 9, 2002).
    On December 13, 2002, the district court filed the Opinion from
    which this appeal arises. The Opinion granted Volvo partial judgment
    on the pleadings, dismissed the Dealers’ counterclaims in the North
    Carolina Litigation, and dismissed the Dealers’ affirmative claims in
    the Arkansas Litigation. Opinion at 558. In its Opinion, the court
    determined, inter alia, that Volvo’s refusal to supply the Dealers with
    Champion Motor Graders did not breach the Dealer Agreements
    because each agreement contained the Without Cause Provision. 
    Id. at 546.
    In addition, the court concluded that the Dealers were not pro-
    tected by the state dealer protection statutes of Arkansas, Louisiana,
    or Texas, because the Choice-of-Law Provision precludes the Dealers
    from seeking protection under those statutes. 
    Id. at 551-54.
    The Deal-
    ers thereafter filed a timely notice of appeal, and we possess jurisdic-
    tion pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.9
    (3) violations of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices and Consumer Pro-
    tection Act, Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 17.41, et seq.; (4) violations of the
    Michigan Motor Vehicle Act, Mich. Comp. Laws Ann., Ch. 445.1561,
    et seq.; (5) violations of the Louisiana Dealer Act, La. Rev. Stat.
    § 51:481, et seq.; (6) violations of Ontario’s Arthur Wishart Act; (7) vio-
    lations of the South Carolina Fair Practices of Farm, Construction, Indus-
    trial and Outdoor Power Equipment Manufacturers, Distributors,
    Wholesalers and Dealers Act, S.C. Code Ann. § 39-6-10, et seq.; (8)
    breach of contract and the covenant of good faith and fair dealing; (9)
    tortious interference with contractual relations and prospective economic
    advantage; (10) unjust enrichment; (11) estoppel; and (12) recoupment.
    9
    We recognize that an award of partial judgment on the pleadings does
    not generally constitute an appealable order. See Am. Canoe Ass’n, Inc.
    v. Murphy Farms, Inc., 
    326 F.3d 505
    , 511 (4th Cir. 2003). This appeal
    is not interlocutory, however, because Volvo has voluntarily dismissed
    its remaining claims. Volvo Trademark, No. 1:00CV238, No.
    1:01CV232, No. 1:01CV122 (W.D.N.C. Jan. 2, 2003).
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                   9
    II.
    We review de novo the issue of whether a district court possessed
    jurisdiction in a declaratory judgment proceeding. Richmond, Freder-
    icksburg & Potomac R. Co. v. United States, 
    945 F.2d 765
    (4th Cir.
    1991). If a plaintiff has asserted sufficient facts to create declaratory
    judgment jurisdiction, we review for abuse of discretion a district
    court’s decision to exercise its jurisdiction. See Wilton v. Seven Falls
    Co., 
    515 U.S. 277
    , 282 (1995) ("[D]istrict courts possess discretion
    in determining whether and when to entertain an action under the
    Declaratory Judgment Act, even when the suit otherwise satisfies sub-
    ject matter jurisdictional prerequisites."). We review de novo a district
    court’s award of judgment on the pleadings. Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(c); see
    Burbach Broad. Co. v. Elkins Radio Corp., 
    278 F.3d 401
    , 405-06 (4th
    Cir. 2002) (noting that same standard is applied to motions under
    Rule 12(c) and Rule 12(b)(6)). In reviewing an award of judgment on
    the pleadings, we assume the facts alleged in the relevant pleadings
    to be true, and we draw all reasonable inferences therefrom. Elkins
    
    Radio, 278 F.3d at 406
    ; see also Edwards v. City of Goldsboro, 
    178 F.3d 231
    , 244 (4th Cir. 1999). Finally, the issue of whether an entity
    is protected under a state dealer protection statute is a question of law,
    which we review de novo. See generally United States v. Hill, 
    322 F.3d 301
    , 304 (4th Cir. 2003); Hand v. Dean Witter Reynolds Inc.,
    
    889 S.W.2d 483
    , 496 (Tex. App. 1994).
    III.
    The Dealers raise multiple issues on appeal. They first maintain
    that the district court erred in exercising jurisdiction in the North Car-
    olina Litigation. Specifically, they contend that Volvo failed to allege
    an actual controversy between it and the Dealers. Moreover, the Deal-
    ers maintain that, even if the court possessed jurisdiction, its exercise
    thereof constituted an abuse of discretion.
    The Dealers next contend that the district court erred when it ruled
    that Volvo’s termination of the Dealer Agreements was not a breach
    of its contractual obligations. They maintain that the contract terms
    "may" and "without cause," as used in the Without Cause Provision,
    are ambiguous, that the Dealer Agreements are not completely inte-
    grated, and that the parties orally modified the Without Cause Provi-
    10             VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    sion. The Dealers contend that, notwithstanding the Without Cause
    Provision, Volvo’s actions breached its implied duty of good faith and
    fair dealing. The Dealers also maintain that, even if the Dealer Agree-
    ments are completely integrated contracts unmodified by oral prom-
    ises, Volvo is estopped from breaching its oral representations.
    Finally, the Dealers contend that the Without Cause Provision is
    trumped by Arkansas, Louisiana, and Texas statutes that preclude
    manufacturers from terminating dealer agreements without cause
    (collectively, the "State Statutes"). The Dealers assert that, under the
    Local Law Provision, the Dealer Agreements are governed by the
    State Statutes. In the alternative, the Dealers maintain that the Choice-
    of-Law Provision should not be given effect because the laws selected
    thereunder are not rationally related to the Dealer Agreements and are
    contrary to the fundamental policies of their home states. Volvo main-
    tains that the Dealers never raised this alternative contention in the
    district court and that it should not be considered on appeal.
    We assess each of these contentions in turn.
    A.
    We first consider whether the district court erred in its exercise of
    jurisdiction in Volvo’s declaratory judgment action. In this regard, it
    is elementary that a federal court may properly exercise jurisdiction
    in a declaratory judgment proceeding when three essentials are met:
    (1) the complaint alleges an "actual controversy" between the parties
    "of sufficient immediacy and reality to warrant issuance of a declara-
    tory judgment;" (2) the court possesses an independent basis for juris-
    diction over the parties (e.g., federal question or diversity
    jurisdiction); and (3) the court does not abuse its discretion in its exer-
    cise of jurisdiction. 28 U.S.C. § 2201; Cont’l Cas. Co. v. Fuscardo,
    
    35 F.3d 963
    , 965 (4th Cir. 1994); N. Jefferson Square Assocs. v. Va.
    Hous. Dev. Auth., 
    94 F. Supp. 2d 709
    , 714 (E.D. Va. 2000).
    Two of these three jurisdictional prerequisites, the first and the
    third, are contested by the Dealers on appeal. The second jurisdic-
    tional prong, that the court must possess an independent basis for
    jurisdiction over the parties, was satisfied when Volvo filed its Com-
    plaint and dropped defendant NFC, the only party defeating diversity.
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                 11
    The district court thus properly concluded that Volvo had established
    diversity jurisdiction in its Complaint. Volvo Trademark, No.
    1:00CV238 (W.D.N.C. Aug. 27, 2001).
    The Dealers maintain, however, that the first and third jurisdic-
    tional prongs are not met, and that the district court erred in its exer-
    cise of jurisdiction. They assert that the first prong (the
    "Constitutional Inquiry") is not satisfied because Volvo’s actions did
    not create an actual controversy under the Declaratory Judgment Act.
    They contend that the third prong (the "Prudential Inquiry") is not met
    because, even if the court had jurisdiction, it abused its discretion in
    considering the merits of this dispute. We address these inquiries
    below.
    1.
    In assessing the Constitutional Inquiry, we look to the Declaratory
    Judgment Act, which provides that "[i]n a case of actual controversy
    within its jurisdiction . . . any court of the United States . . . may
    declare the rights and other legal relations of any interested party
    seeking such declaration, whether or not further relief is or could be
    sought." 28 U.S.C. § 2201 (emphasis added). A case meets the actual
    controversy requirement only if it presents a controversy that qualifies
    as an actual controversy under Article III of the Constitution. See
    Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Haworth, 
    300 U.S. 227
    , 240 (1937) (deciding
    that, pursuant to statute’s limitation to cases involving actual contro-
    versy, Act is operative only with respect to constitutional contro-
    versy). The Dealers contend that, although Volvo’s termination
    notices created disputes regarding their rights to distribute Champion
    Motor Graders, "the termination did not create the type of trademark
    ‘case or controversy’ subject to declaratory-judgment review." As
    explained below, this contention is immaterial.
    The Dealers first maintain that the district court lacked federal
    question jurisdiction because they did not take any action or make any
    assertion that placed Volvo in objective apprehension of the improper
    use of its trademark or its ability to control its trademark. For a con-
    troversy to exist for declaratory judgment purposes, however, the situ-
    ation need not present a federal cause of action; if the parties are
    diverse, a federal court may possess subject matter jurisdiction over
    12             VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    a state-law contract dispute. The Dealers have admitted in their plead-
    ings that the court had diversity jurisdiction over the North Carolina
    Litigation, and the existence of a contract dispute is plainly evident
    in the pleadings.10 Indeed, when the court addressed the Dealers’
    Motion, Volvo had already been sued in Maine and Texas by Cham-
    pion dealers,11 and Volvo had already received written and oral litiga-
    tion threats from the Dealers.12
    The Dealers acknowledge that an actual controversy exists under
    the Declaratory Judgment Act when a plaintiff seeks declaratory relief
    in order to avoid the accrual of potential damages for past actions.
    NUCOR Corp. v. Aceros Y Maquilas de Occidente, 
    28 F.3d 572
    , 577
    (7th Cir. 1994) (stating that purpose of Declaratory Judgment Act is
    to avoid accrual of avoidable damages to party uncertain of its rights).
    10
    In its Complaint, Volvo sought a "declaratory judgment with respect
    to [its] rights and obligations under certain contracts . . . ." Complaint
    ¶ 3. And, in assessing whether an actual controversy existed between
    Volvo and the Dealers under the Complaint, the magistrate judge
    observed that Volvo "run[s] the risk of incurring multiple liabilities if [it
    does] not seek judicial interpretation and clarification of [its] rights in
    respect to the contracts . . . . Without a doubt, there is an active and
    immediate controversy among these plaintiffs and defendants . . . ."
    Volvo Trademark, No. 1:00CV238 (W.D.N.C. April 9, 2001).
    11
    On February 2, 2000, Champion dealer N.A. Burkitt, Inc. initiated
    litigation against Volvo in the District of Maine alleging, inter alia, that
    Volvo’s termination of its dealer agreement contravened the Maine
    Motor Vehicle Dealers Act. On August 28, 2000, a defendant in Volvo’s
    original complaint in North Carolina (i.e., NFC) commenced litigation
    against Volvo in Texas, contending, inter alia, that Volvo could not ter-
    minate its dealer agreement without cause.
    12
    The initiation of litigation against Volvo and the threats of future liti-
    gation distinguish this dispute from North Jefferson, a decision on which
    the Dealers rely. There, the district court determined that a controversy
    was not present under the Declaratory Judgment Act because the defen-
    dant had not taken any action, even of a preliminary nature, against the
    plaintiff, and the defendant had not indicated that it intended to take any
    future legal action against the plaintiff. N. 
    Jefferson, 94 F. Supp. 2d at 718
    . See generally GTE Directories Pub. Corp. v. Trimen Am., Inc., 
    67 F.3d 1563
    (11th Cir. 1995) (holding that threat of future litigation gives
    rise to actual controversy).
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                 13
    When Volvo initiated its declaratory judgment action in North Caro-
    lina, it had terminated the Dealer Agreements, it had received the
    Dealers’ litigation threats, and separate suits had been filed against it
    in Maine and Texas. In these circumstances, Volvo possessed a rea-
    sonable apprehension of a multiplicity of litigation and of liability for
    ongoing damages. An actual controversy therefore existed between
    Volvo and the Dealers when Volvo initiated the North Carolina Liti-
    gation. The first prong of the declaratory judgment test is thus satis-
    fied.
    2.
    The Dealers next maintain that Volvo fails to satisfy the third
    prong of the declaratory judgment test, the Prudential Inquiry. They
    contend that, even if an actual controversy existed and the district
    court possessed an independent basis of jurisdiction, the court never-
    theless abused its discretion when it exercised jurisdiction in the
    North Carolina Litigation.
    If a district court possesses declaratory judgment jurisdiction, it
    may nonetheless, in the exercise of its discretion, decline to entertain
    the action. See Cont’l Cas. 
    Co., 35 F.3d at 965
    (acknowledging that
    court possessed jurisdiction in declaratory judgment action and noting
    that critical question was whether court should have exercised its
    jurisdiction). The exercise of such discretion, however, is not without
    bounds. We have held that a district court must have "good reason"
    for declining to exercise its declaratory judgment jurisdiction. 
    Id. As Judge
    Parker aptly opined years ago, a district court is obliged to rule
    on the merits of a declaratory judgment action when declaratory relief
    "will serve a useful purpose in clarifying and settling the legal rela-
    tions in issue," and "will terminate and afford relief from the uncer-
    tainty, insecurity, and controversy giving rise to the proceeding."
    Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Quarles, 
    92 F.2d 321
    , 325 (4th Cir. 1937).
    And we have often observed that "‘district courts have great latitude
    in determining whether to assert jurisdiction over declaratory judg-
    ment actions.’" United Capitol Ins. Co. v. Kapiloff, 
    155 F.3d 488
    , 493
    (4th Cir. 1998) (quoting Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Ind-Com Elec. Co.,
    
    139 F.3d 419
    , 422 (4th Cir. 1998)). In these circumstances, the district
    court did not abuse its discretion. Its Opinion served several useful
    purposes: it clarified and settled Volvo’s legal obligations under the
    14            VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    Dealer Agreements, it eliminated uncertainty regarding those agree-
    ments, and it clarified the contractual rights of the parties.13
    The Dealers, relying on the Supreme Court’s decision in Colorado
    River Water Conservation District v. United States, 
    424 U.S. 800
    , 817
    (1976), maintain that principles of efficiency and comity compelled
    the district court either to dismiss or abstain from Volvo’s declaratory
    judgment action, in the interests of conserving judicial resources and
    comprehensively disposing of the litigation. We recognize that the
    federal trial courts should weigh the legitimate concerns of efficiency
    and comity when deciding whether to award declaratory relief. 
    Id. As the
    Dealers acknowledge, however, "the first suit should have prior-
    ity, absent the showing of balance of convenience in favor of the sec-
    ond action." Ellicott Mach. Corp. v. Modern Welding Co., Inc., 
    502 F.2d 178
    , 180 n.2 (4th Cir. 1974) (internal quotation marks and cita-
    tion omitted). In this situation, as there has been no such showing, the
    court did not abuse its discretion in declining to defer to the Arkansas
    proceeding.
    B.
    The Dealers next maintain that Volvo breached its contractual obli-
    gations when it terminated the Dealer Agreements under its programs
    of Volvoization and Dealer Rationalization. More specifically, the
    Dealers contend that Volvo breached the Dealer Agreements when it
    13
    The factual predicate underlying this appeal is analogous to the fac-
    tual underpinnings of Kapiloff. There, we concluded that a "declaratory
    judgment action is designed to allay exactly the sort of uncertainty that
    flows from the threat that ambiguous contractual rights may be asserted,"
    and we observed that a "declaratory judgment action allows the uncertain
    party to gain relief from the insecurity caused by a potential suit waiting
    in the wings." 
    Kapiloff, 155 F.3d at 494
    .
    The Dealers acknowledge that a federal court may exercise its declara-
    tory judgment jurisdiction when a plaintiff is seeking a declaration to
    avoid the accrual of potential damages for past actions. See Tempco Elec.
    Heater Corp. v. Omega Eng’g, Inc., 
    819 F.2d 746
    , 749 (7th Cir. 1987)
    (observing that declaratory judgment is available where party desires
    declaration of legal effect of proposed or past course of action). In this
    dispute, Volvo was seeking such a declaration.
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                    15
    began placing Volvo labels on Champion Motor Graders and when it
    refused to provide the Dealers with an inventory of Champion Motor
    Graders. As explained below, we disagree.
    First and foremost, Volvo’s termination of the Dealer Agreements
    did not constitute a breach of contract because the Without Cause
    Provision authorized Volvo to act as it did. When Volvo acquired
    Champion in 1997, Volvo assumed Champion’s rights and obliga-
    tions under the Dealer Agreements. Volvo was, therefore, entitled to
    terminate the Dealer Agreements under the Without Cause Provision.14
    The Dealers do not contend that the express terms of the Dealer
    Agreements preclude Volvo from terminating their dealer contracts
    without cause. Instead, they contend that the Without Cause Provision
    14
    Volvo also contends that, in the absence of the Without Cause Provi-
    sion, its terminations of the Dealer Agreements would not constitute
    breaches of contract because "the Market Withdrawal Provision contem-
    plates the possibility that Champion could completely disappear from the
    marketplace without liability following a discontinuation of the CHAM-
    PION line of motor graders." The Market Withdrawal Provision pro-
    vides:
    Champion reserves the right at any time to change models, clas-
    sification of models and specifications, or add to or discontinue
    any products or product lines without notice to [Dealer or Dis-
    tributor] and without incurring any obligation to incorporate such
    changes in any other products.
    CLM, Clark, and FEC Dealer Agreements § 27. According to Volvo, any
    interpretation of the Market Withdrawal Provision that would not permit
    Champion to withdraw from the marketplace would render meaningless
    the phrase "discontinue any product or product lines." The Dealers con-
    tend, however, that in order to "withdraw from the market," Volvo would
    have to cease producing motor graders at the Champion factory — the
    simple act of relabeling does not constitute a withdrawal from the mar-
    ketplace. As the district court observed, however:
    Volvo did not terminate the dealership contracts by virtue of dis-
    continuing Champion Road motor graders or withdrawing that
    product from the market; the contracts were terminated pursuant
    to the provision . . . for termination without cause.
    Opinion at 543-44.
    16           VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    is ambiguous and that the district court was obligated to look beyond
    the Dealer Agreements in determining Volvo’s contractual obliga-
    tions. Under South Carolina and Ontario law, which apply to CLM’s
    and Clark’s contract claims, the court did not err because (1) the
    Without Cause Provision is clear and unambiguous; (2) the Dealer
    Agreements were integrated instruments; and (3) oral promises,
    course of dealing, and industry custom can not alter the plain and
    unambiguous terms of the integrated Dealer Agreements. See U.S.
    Leasing Corp. v. Janicare, Inc., 
    364 S.E.2d 202
    , 205 (S.C. Ct. App.
    1988) (providing that, under South Carolina law, if contract contains
    language that imports complete legal obligation, parol or extrinsic
    evidence is not admissible to add to contract); Gutierrez v. Tropic
    Int’l Ltd., 63 O.R.3d 63, 73 (Ont. C.A. 2002) (providing that, under
    Ontario law, evidence of collateral agreement is not admissible to
    contradict terms of integrated contract).
    1.
    Because the terms of the Dealer Agreements favor the legal posi-
    tion advanced by Volvo, the Dealers emphasize a series of oral prom-
    ises allegedly made by Champion representatives before the Dealer
    Agreements were made. In South Carolina and Ontario, however, the
    parol evidence rule precludes the use of extrinsic evidence of prior or
    contemporaneous negotiations to alter, contradict, or explain the
    terms of the Dealer Agreements, provided the agreements are com-
    plete, unambiguous and unconditional. See Gilliland v. Elmwood
    Prop., 
    391 S.E.2d 577
    , 581 (S.C. 1990) (applying South Carolina
    law); Gutierrez, 63 O.R.3d at 71 (applying Ontario law). Unless the
    Dealer Agreements are ambiguous or incomplete, oral promises or
    representations made to the Dealers by Champion representatives
    prior to execution of the Dealer Agreements have no effect on those
    agreements. In their appeal, the Dealers maintain that the Dealer
    Agreements are both ambiguous and incomplete and that the district
    court erred by not incorporating Volvo’s oral promises into them. As
    explained below, we disagree.
    a.
    The Dealers first maintain that the Without Cause Provision is
    ambiguous and that the district court should have looked beyond the
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                 17
    four corners of the Dealer Agreements in determining Volvo’s con-
    tractual obligations. The Without Cause Provision provides that
    "Champion may terminate [the] agreement at any time without cause
    by written notice of termination . . . ." CLM, Clark, and FEC Dealer
    Agreements § 24.4 (emphasis added). The Dealers contend that this
    terminology is ambiguous because it fails to define the terms "may"
    and "without cause" as they are used therein. To the contrary, how-
    ever, there is nothing ambiguous about the term "may," and there is
    no ambiguity in any of the other operative terms in the Without Cause
    Provision. Those terms are easily and commonly understood in the
    English language — contract terms are rarely more plainly stated. See
    Cromeens, Holloman, Sibert, Inc. v. AB Volvo, No. 01-3770, 
    2003 WL 22519825
    , at *13 (7th Cir. Nov. 7, 2003) (declaring contract lan-
    guage permitting dealer agreement to be terminated at any time with-
    out cause to be unambiguous).15
    The Dealers contend, however, that the ambiguity of the Without
    Cause Provision is apparent when examined in the context of Sec-
    tion 24 of the Dealer Agreements. More specifically, the Dealers
    maintain that the "may terminate" language of the Without Cause Pro-
    vision contrasts sharply with the "shall terminate automatically" lan-
    guage found in Subsection 24.5. As the district court noted in its
    Opinion, however, this distinction relates to the fact that termination
    under the Without Cause Provision is discretionary and occurs only
    after sixty days notice. Opinion at 545. A termination under Subsec-
    tion 24.5, by contrast, is non-discretionary, and it occurs automati-
    15
    The Seventh Circuit’s decision in Cromeens was filed on November
    7, 2003, a month after this appeal was argued. One of the issues in Crom-
    eens was whether, under their programs of Volvoization and Dealer
    Rationalization, AB Volvo, Volvo Excavators AB, and Volvo Construc-
    tion Equipment NV could terminate the dealers of Samsung construction
    equipment without cause. The dealer agreements in Cromeens contained
    a termination clause analogous to the Without Cause Provision. Crom-
    eens, 
    2003 WL 22519825
    , at *11. On appeal, the Samsung dealers main-
    tained that the "without cause" provision in the Samsung dealer
    agreements was ambiguous. The Seventh Circuit rejected this contention,
    ruling that the language of the "without cause" provision "could not be
    more plain." 
    Id. at *13.
    The Seventh Circuit then concluded that the
    dealer agreements unambiguously permitted termination of the Samsung
    dealers without cause. 
    Id. 18 VOLVO
    CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    cally upon the occurrence of a certain event, such as when a dealer
    files for bankruptcy.
    The Dealers also maintain that the ambiguity of the term "without
    cause" is apparent when examined in the context of Section 24. The
    Dealers contend that, because Section 24 otherwise provides when
    Champion can terminate the Dealer Agreements for cause, the term
    "cause" in the Without Cause Provision should be interpreted to mean
    a cause not otherwise provided for in Section 24. As the Eleventh Cir-
    cuit has observed, however, the fact that both "with cause" and "with-
    out cause" termination provisions are contained in the same section
    of a contract only shows that the parties differentiated between termi-
    nation for cause and termination without cause. And when a contract
    contains both "for cause" and "without cause" provisions, a party may
    terminate a contract, even in the absence of breach or fault by the
    other party, pursuant to the without cause provision. Harris Corp. v.
    Giesting & Assocs., Inc., 
    297 F.3d 1270
    , 1273 (11th Cir. 2002). We
    agree with the district court; the Without Cause Provision is "clear,
    specific and unambiguous." Opinion at 546.
    b.
    The Dealers next maintain that, because the Dealer Agreements are
    incomplete, evidence of promises made by Champion representatives
    prior to execution of the Dealer Agreements are not barred by the
    parol evidence rule. In this regard, a court applying South Carolina or
    Ontario law is obliged to consider a writing as complete if "the writ-
    ing on its face appears to express the whole agreement." U.S. Leasing
    
    Corp., 364 S.E.2d at 205
    ; G. H. L. Fridman, Law of Contract in Can-
    ada 22 (4th ed. 1999). In addition, we are entitled to consider an inte-
    gration clause in weighing whether contracting parties intended a
    written contract to constitute the entirety of an agreement. 
    Gilliland, 391 S.E.2d at 581
    ; Gutierrez, 63 O.R.3d at 73. In this situation, the
    Dealer Agreements are detailed and explicit, and each contains the
    Integration Clause providing that the writing is "the entire and only
    agreement between the parties respecting the . . . purchase and distri-
    bution" by the Dealers of Champion products and parts.16 Further-
    16
    The Integration Clause specifically provides:
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                    19
    more, the Dealer Agreements emphasize that "terms or conditions in
    connection therewith not incorporated herein shall not be binding
    upon either party." Finally, the agreements provide that they cancel,
    terminate, and supersede all previous agreements entered into
    between the parties. CLM and Clark Dealer Agreements § 32.1; FEC
    Dealer Agreement § 33.1.
    In these circumstances, the Dealer Agreements are both unambigu-
    ous and integrated. As such, we agree with the district court on the
    parol evidence issue. The parol evidence rule bars the Dealers from
    utilizing oral representations made prior to contract execution to mod-
    ify or contradict the terms of the Dealer Agreements. Opinion at 546.
    2.
    The Dealers next maintain that subsequent oral promises, made by
    Champion and Volvo representatives after the Dealer Agreements
    were executed, altered the terms thereof. Volvo acknowledges that the
    parol evidence rule does not bar the use of such promises; it main-
    tains, however, that the Modification Clause precludes their use here.
    Pursuant to the Modification Clause, any modification of a Dealer
    Agreement is invalid unless it is in writing and signed by an autho-
    rized Champion officer.17 In response to Volvo’s reliance on the Mod-
    This agreement and [any] accompanying Exhibits contain the
    entire and only agreement between the parties respecting the sale
    to and purchase and distribution by [Dealer or Distributor] of
    Products and Parts, and any representations, terms or conditions
    in connection therewith not incorporated herein shall not be
    binding upon either party. This agreement wholly cancels, termi-
    nates and supersedes any agreement heretofore entered into
    between the parties, or their successors or assigns, pertaining to
    Products and Parts.
    CLM and Clark Dealer Agreements § 32.1; FEC Dealer Agreement
    § 33.1.
    17
    The Modification Clause provides:
    This agreement, and any modification, renewal, waiver, exten-
    sion or termination hereof, shall not be valid unless in writing
    and signed by a duly authorized officer of Champion.
    FEC Dealer Agreement § 33.2; CLM and Clark Dealer Agreements
    § 32.2 (omitting "waiver").
    20            VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    ification Clause, the Dealers assert that a "no oral modification
    clause" may itself be orally modified, validating subsequent unwritten
    modifications. This position must also fail, however, because, pursu-
    ant to South Carolina and Ontario law, an oral modification of a writ-
    ten contract must be supported by separate and adequate
    consideration. See Evatt v. Campbell, 
    106 S.E.2d 447
    , 449-50 (S.C.
    1959) (observing that written contract may be changed by subsequent
    parol agreement supported by valuable consideration); Francis v.
    Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, 21 O.R.3d 75, 83 (Ont. C.A.
    1994) (recognizing principle of contract law that additional consider-
    ation is required to support modification of existing agreement).
    The Dealers’ sole basis for contending that they provided separate
    and adequate consideration in support of modification of the Modifi-
    cation Clause is that they continued to market Champion Motor Grad-
    ers after Champion was purchased by Volvo. Although the Dealers
    may have made good faith efforts to market Champion Motor Graders
    after Champion’s purchase by Volvo, such efforts could not constitute
    consideration in support of an oral modification because, under the
    Best Efforts Provision, the Dealers had a preexisting contractual obli-
    gation to make such efforts. Rabon v. State Fin. Corp., 
    26 S.E.2d 501
    ,
    502 (S.C. 1943) (observing that, pursuant to South Carolina law,
    agreement to do what one is already legally bound to do is not suffi-
    cient consideration to support new agreement); Francis, 21 O.R.3d at
    82 (observing that, under Ontario law, agreement to perform preexist-
    ing duty does not constitute new consideration). In such circum-
    stances, the Dealers’ contention of subsequent oral modification of
    the Dealer Agreements must fail.
    3.
    In their final effort to convince us to read additional terms into the
    Dealer Agreements, the Dealers contend that, in defining the parties’
    obligations under the Dealer Agreements, we should look to the
    course of dealing between the parties and to industry custom regard-
    ing heavy equipment dealer franchises. Although courts commonly
    look to evidence of the course of dealing and to industry custom and
    usage in assessing ambiguous contract terms, under South Carolina
    and Ontario law, "extrinsic evidence of a usage or custom is not
    admissible where the contract expresses the intent of the parties in
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                 21
    clear and unambiguous language." U.S. Leasing 
    Corp., 364 S.E.2d at 206
    ; see Gutierrez, 63 O.R.3d at 71 (concluding that extrinsic evi-
    dence is not admissible to vary terms of clear and unambiguous con-
    tract). The terms of the Dealer Agreements are clear and
    unambiguous, and we must decline to modify them on the basis of
    either course of dealing or industry custom.
    4.
    Finally, the Dealers contend that Volvo breached its implied duty
    of good faith and fair dealing when it refused to supply them with
    Champion Motor Graders. In South Carolina and Ontario, however,
    there can be no breach of an implied covenant of good faith and fair
    dealing where "a party to a contract [does] what provisions of the
    contract expressly [give] him the right to do." Adams v. G.J. Creel &
    Sons, Inc., 
    465 S.E.2d 84
    , 85 (S.C. 1995); see Peel Condo. Corp. No.
    505 v. Cam-Valley Homes, Ltd., 53 O.R.3d 1, 16 (Ont. C.A. 2001)
    (holding that covenant of good faith and fair dealing is circumscribed
    by terms of contract). In this regard, the Dealer Agreements gave
    Champion, and therefore Volvo, the right to terminate the Dealer
    Agreements without cause. In terminating the Dealer Agreements,
    then, Volvo could not have breached its duty of good faith and fair
    dealing.
    C.
    The Dealers maintain that, even if the Dealer Agreements are com-
    pletely integrated contracts unmodified by the promises of Champion
    and Volvo representatives, Volvo is estopped from breaching its oral
    promises. The Dealers’ estoppel theory is without merit. Promissory
    estoppel is simply not a cause of action recognized in Ontario. See
    Gilbert Steel, Ltd. v. Univ. Constr., Ltd., 12 O.R.2d 19, 23 (Ont. C.A.
    1976) ("[E]stoppel can never be used as a sword but only as a shield.
    A plaintiff cannot found his claim in estoppel."). And in South Caro-
    lina, equitable relief is precluded under a theory of promissory estop-
    pel if the estoppel claim is in direct conflict with a specific contract
    term. See Charleston County Sch. Dist. v. Laidlaw Transit, Inc., 
    559 S.E.2d 362
    , 364-65 (S.C. Ct. App. 2001) (holding that party who
    acknowledges being bound by contract cannot recover in equity under
    theory of promissory estoppel if estoppel claim is in direct conflict
    22           VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    with contract term). CLM’s and Clark’s estoppel claims are barred
    under South Carolina law, therefore, because they conflict with the
    Without Cause Provision.
    D.
    We next turn to the Dealers’ contentions regarding the State Stat-
    utes. The Dealers maintain that, notwithstanding the Without Cause
    Provision, Volvo was prohibited by the State Statutes from terminat-
    ing the Dealer Agreements without good cause. More specifically,
    Clark contends that the Arkansas Franchise Act (the "Arkansas Act")
    prohibited Volvo from terminating its Dealer Agreement (Ark. Code
    § 4-72-201, et seq.); CLM maintains that Volvo’s termination of its
    Dealer Agreement was prohibited by the Louisiana Dealer Act (the
    "Louisiana Act"; La. Rev. Stat. § 51:481, et seq.); and FEC alleges
    that both the Texas Farm, Industrial and Outdoor Power Equipment
    Dealer Act (the "Equipment Act"; Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 19.01,
    et seq.) and the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices and Consumer Pro-
    tection Act (the "DTPA"; Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 17.41, et seq.)
    precluded Volvo’s termination of its Dealer Agreement.
    A federal court exercising diversity jurisdiction is obliged to apply
    the substantive law of the state in which it sits, including the state’s
    choice-of-law rules. See Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins, 
    304 U.S. 64
    , 79
    (1938); Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co., Inc., 
    313 U.S. 487
    , 496
    (1941) (observing that forum state’s choice-of-law rules are substan-
    tive). And when a lawsuit is transferred from one federal court to
    another pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a), the transferee court is
    obliged to apply the choice-of-law rules that the transferor court
    would have applied. Van Dusen v. Barrack, 
    376 U.S. 612
    , 632-37
    (1964). This transfer, however, was not a typical § 1404(a)
    convenience-of-the-witnesses transfer. Instead, the Arkansas Litiga-
    tion was transferred to North Carolina because the North Carolina
    court declined to defer to the Dealers’ later filed Arkansas case. The
    North Carolina Litigation was first filed, venue was proper in the
    Western District of North Carolina, and that court possessed jurisdic-
    tion over all the parties. The North Carolina court’s decision that it
    need not defer to the Arkansas court, therefore, was entirely proper.
    Under these circumstances, and in light of the principles animating
    the Supreme Court’s decision in Van Dusen, we are not at all sure that
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                  23
    the Van Dusen precedent should be blindly and mechanically applied,
    as the Dealers would have us do. See Van 
    Dusen, 376 U.S. at 635-36
    ("The legislative history of § 1404(a) certainly does not justify the
    rather startling conclusion that one might get a change of law as a
    bonus for a change of venue. Indeed, an interpretation accepting such
    a rule would go far to frustrate the remedial purposes of § 1404(a).
    If a change of law were in the offing, the parties might well regard
    the section primarily as a forum-shopping instrument.").
    Moreover, the claims asserted by the Dealers in the Arkansas Liti-
    gation are mirror images of their counterclaims in the North Carolina
    Litigation. Thus, applying Arkansas law to the Arkansas claims and
    North Carolina law to the North Carolina counterclaims could (in the-
    ory, at least) lead to different results on identical claims. It therefore
    seems clear that the choice-of-law rules of only one state should be
    applied to this action. For example, in Boardman Petroleum, Inc. v.
    Federated Mutual Insurance Co., 
    135 F.3d 750
    (11th Cir. 1998), an
    insurer and its insured filed separate actions in the federal courts of
    different states, both raising the question of whether coverage existed
    under an insurance policy. The insurer’s action was transferred from
    South Carolina to Georgia, where the insured’s action was pending,
    and the proceedings were consolidated. The Eleventh Circuit applied
    Van Dusen but nonetheless concluded that "of necessity, only one
    state’s law may be applied" to the consolidated case. 
    Id. at 753;
    see
    also Bott v. Am. Hydrocarbon Corp., 
    441 F.2d 896
    , 899-900 (5th Cir.
    1971) ("[W]hen the California action was transferred to Texas the
    California law went with it. But this is only the first step, because the
    Texas District Court found pending before it two separate but identi-
    cal actions between the same parties, which it consolidated. . . . The
    Texas court could not try the consolidated cases under two sets of
    laws if to do so would produce differing results. If there was a con-
    flict, it was required to make a choice of law.").
    In any event, we need not definitively decide how this thorny issue
    should be resolved, because the choice-of-law principles of North
    Carolina and Arkansas are sufficiently similar that the outcome of this
    dispute would be the same under either set of rules. Both North Caro-
    lina and Arkansas typically give effect to contractual choice-of-law
    provisions. See Torres v. McClain, 
    535 S.E.2d 623
    , 625 (N.C. App.
    2000) (holding that parties’ choice of law is generally binding); In re
    24               VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    Jones, 
    231 B.R. 66
    , 68 (Bankr. E.D. Ark. 1999) (observing that
    Arkansas courts will generally uphold contract’s choice of law). In
    addition, as discussed in more detail later, both Arkansas and North
    Carolina rely on the Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws (1971)
    (the "Second Restatement") to determine the circumstances under
    which a contractual choice-of-law provision will be given effect. See
    Cable Tel Servs., Inc. v. Overland Contracting, Inc., 
    574 S.E.2d 31
    ,
    33-34 (N.C. Ct. App. 2002); S. Farm Bureau Cas. Ins. Co. v. Craven,
    
    89 S.W.3d 369
    , 372 (Ark. Ct. App. 2002). Accordingly, in the interest
    of simplicity, and because it will not affect the outcome of this pro-
    ceeding, we will approach this dispute through the prism of North
    Carolina’s choice-of-law rules.
    In support of their contentions regarding the State Statutes, the
    Dealers rely on the presumptive rule of lex loci contractus, that is, the
    interpretation of a contract is governed by the law of the place where
    it was made. See Tanglewood Land Co., Inc. v. Byrd, 
    261 S.E.2d 655
    ,
    656 (N.C. 1980) (observing presumption that interpretation of con-
    tract is governed by law of place where contract was made). Under
    North Carolina law, however, such a presumption may be overcome
    by the presence of a choice-of-law provision in a contract. See Bueltel
    v. Lumber Mut. Ins. Co., 
    518 S.E.2d 205
    , 209 (N.C. App. 1999) (not-
    ing that, when contract contains choice-of-law provision, parties
    intended exception to presumptive rule that law of place where con-
    tract made governs). In this situation, the Dealer Agreements each
    contain a Choice-of-Law Provision.18
    18
    The Choice-of-Law Provision in the Clark and CLM Dealer Agree-
    ments provides:
    This Agreement has been formalized in South Carolina, and the
    rights, duties and obligations of the parties as set forth herein
    shall be determined according to the laws of the State of South
    Carolina.
    CLM and Clark Dealer Agreements § 29. The Choice-of-Law Provision
    in the FEC agreement provides:
    This Agreement and the rights and obligations of the parties
    hereunder shall be governed by and construed in accordance
    with the laws of the Province of Ontario.
    FEC Dealer Agreement § 29.
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                     25
    Recognizing the difficultly presented by that provision, the Dealers
    attack Volvo’s position that the Dealer Agreements are governed
    solely by South Carolina and Ontario law. First, the Dealers contend
    that the Local Law Provision is also a choice-of-law clause and that,
    pursuant thereto, the Dealer Agreements are governed by the State
    Statutes. Second, the Dealers maintain that, if the Dealer Agreements
    are not governed by the State Statutes under the Local Law Provision,
    the Choice-of-Law Provision is invalid because the law selected
    thereunder contravenes the fundamental policies of their home states.
    We address these contentions below.
    1.
    The Dealers first contend that there are, in effect, two choice-of-
    law clauses in each Dealer Agreement — the Choice-of-Law Provi-
    sion (§ 29) and the Local Law Provision (§ 30). The Dealers maintain
    that these two clauses are reconcilable because the drafters of the
    Dealer Agreements could have intended the Choice-of-Law Provision
    to be applicable only in the absence of local law governing the agree-
    ments. The Dealers contend that, because these two provisions are
    reconcilable, it would be error to give effect to one clause but not the
    other. As explained below, these contentions are without merit.
    Under the Local Law Provision, the rights and obligations created
    by the Dealer Agreements are subject to all applicable laws, orders,
    and regulations of governments and government agencies having
    jurisdiction over the parties. If a contracting party believes that a local
    law substantially alters the relationships established by its Dealer
    Agreement, that party may request the other party to modify the agree-
    ment.19 According to Volvo, the State Statutes, if applied, would
    19
    The Local Law Provision provides:
    The rights and obligations of the parties hereto shall be subject
    to all applicable laws, orders, regulations, directions, restrictions
    and limitations of governments and government agencies having
    jurisdiction over the parties hereto. In the event that [a local]
    law, order, regulation, direction, restriction or limitation, appro-
    priation, . . . or interpretation thereof shall, in the judgment of
    either party hereto substantially alter the relationship between the
    parties under this Agreement or the advantages derived from
    such relationship, either party may request the other hereto to
    modify this Agreement.
    CLM, Clark, and FEC Dealer Agreements § 30 (emphasis added).
    26            VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    effectively nullify the Without Cause Provision, substantially altering
    the relationship between Champion and the Dealers. We agree.
    The Local Law Provision provides a ready mechanism for the
    Dealers to request that the Dealer Agreements be modified. If the
    Dealers had viewed the State Statutes as substantially altering the
    relationships between the parties under the Dealer Agreements, they
    were entitled to request Champion (or Volvo) to modify the agree-
    ments; the Local Law Provision expressly provided them with this
    right. The Dealers did not, however, seek to modify the Dealer Agree-
    ments so that they could be terminated only "for good cause," and
    they cannot now maintain that, under the Local Law Provision, they
    are protected by the State Statutes.20
    2.
    In their second assault on the Choice-of-Law Provision, the Dealers
    maintain that application of South Carolina law (under the Clark and
    CLM Dealer Agreements) and Ontario law (under the FEC Dealer
    Agreement) is unreasonable and contravenes the fundamental policies
    of Arkansas, Louisiana, and Texas. Despite North Carolina’s adher-
    ence to the presumptive rule of lex loci contractus, contracting parties
    in North Carolina are entitled to agree that a particular jurisdiction’s
    substantive law will govern their contract, and such a provision will
    generally be given effect. See 
    Torres, 535 S.E.2d at 625
    (holding that
    20
    In support of their contention that the Local Law Provision mandates
    that the State Statutes govern the Dealer Agreements, the Dealers rely on
    two decisions, Sutter Home Winery, Inc. v. Vintage Selections, Ltd., 
    971 F.2d 401
    (9th Cir. 1992), and Lake Charles Diesel, Inc. v. General
    Motors Corp., 
    328 F.3d 192
    (5th Cir. 2003). Their reliance on these deci-
    sions, however, is misplaced. The agreement at issue in Sutter Home
    expressly provided that, "[e]xcept as otherwise required by applicable
    law, this Agreement shall be governed by the law of the State of Califor-
    nia." Sutter 
    Home, 971 F.2d at 406
    (emphasis added). This language is
    absent from the Dealer Agreements. The agreement at issue in Lake
    Charles provided that "any provision which contravenes the laws of any
    state or jurisdiction where this Agreement is to be performed will be
    deemed not a part of this Agreement in such state or jurisdiction." Lake
    
    Charles, 328 F.3d at 197
    n.10. No such provision exists in the Dealer
    Agreements.
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                  27
    21
    parties’ choice of law is generally binding). In certain circum-
    stances, however, North Carolina will decline to honor a choice-of-
    law provision. North Carolina relies on the Second Restatement to
    determine whether such circumstances are present. See Cable Tel
    
    Servs., 574 S.E.2d at 33-34
    . Pursuant to § 187 of the Second Restate-
    ment, a choice-of-law provision will not be enforced if either of the
    following two conditions is satisfied:
    (a) the chosen state has no substantial relationship to the
    parties or the transaction and there is no other reasonable
    basis for the parties’ choice, or
    (b) application of the law of the chosen state would be
    contrary to a fundamental policy of a state which has a
    materially greater interest than the chosen state in the deter-
    mination of the particular issue . . . .
    Second Restatement § 187 (emphasis added). The Dealers maintain
    that the Choice-of-Law Provision does not apply here because it con-
    travenes both prongs of the § 187 test. They contend, first, that there
    is no substantial relationship between South Carolina and the Clark
    and CLM Dealer Agreements (the "Substantial Relationship" issue),
    and, second, that application of South Carolina or Ontario law to
    those agreements would contravene the fundamental policies of
    Arkansas, Louisiana, and Texas (the "Fundamental Policy" issue).
    Before addressing this aspect of the Dealers’ assault on the Choice-
    of-Law Provision, we must assess whether Volvo is correct in its con-
    tention that the Substantial Relationship and Fundamental Policy
    issues were not properly raised in the district court. If those issues are
    properly before us, we must determine whether the Dealers are pro-
    tected by the State Statutes.
    21
    We recognize that the "Supreme Court has consistently accorded
    choice of forum and choice of law provisions presumptive validity."
    Allen v. Lloyd’s of London, 
    94 F.3d 923
    , 928 (4th Cir. 1996).
    28            VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    a.
    Volvo contends that the Substantial Relationship and Fundamental
    Policy issues were not raised in the district court. Absent exceptional
    circumstances, of course, we do not consider issues raised for the first
    time on appeal. Williams v. Prof’l Transp. Inc., 
    294 F.3d 607
    , 614
    (4th Cir. 2002) (citing Muth v. United States, 
    1 F.3d 246
    , 250 (4th
    Cir. 1993)). Indeed, we consider such issues on appeal only when the
    failure to do so would result in a miscarriage of justice. 
    Muth, 1 F.3d at 250
    .
    In support of its contention, Volvo relies on an observation in the
    Opinion that the Dealers and the Dealer Agreements may not bear a
    reasonable relationship to South Carolina or Ontario. The court
    declined to decide whether such a reasonable relationship existed,
    however, concluding that the Dealers had not raised the Substantial
    Relationship issue. Opinion at 542 n.5. The Dealers maintain that
    Volvo has mischaracterized the record on this point, and they contend
    that the Substantial Relationship and Fundamental Policy issues were
    raised in the district court. In support of their position that these issues
    were properly raised, the Dealers point to memoranda filed on Octo-
    ber 23, 2002 (the "October Response"), in which they maintained:
    all the Dealers are protected by dealer protection statutes
    enacted by their own state legislatures to protect them from
    the precise action that Volvo is seeking to undertake. . . . all
    but one of the applicable statutes contain ‘non-waiver’ pro-
    visions — meaning that the contract simply cannot be seen
    as circumventing the statute.
    In the October Response, the Dealers asserted that, because some of
    the State Statutes contain anti-waiver provisions, the Dealers are pro-
    tected by them, despite the presence of the Choice-of-Law Provision
    in the Dealer Agreements. In assessing whether an issue was properly
    raised in the district court, we are obliged on appeal to consider any
    theory plainly encompassed by the submissions in the underlying liti-
    gation. See Maynard v. Gen. Elec. Co., 
    486 F.2d 538
    , 539 (4th Cir.
    1973). In this circumstance, the October Response plainly encom-
    passes the contention that certain of the State Statutes contain anti-
    waiver provisions (namely the Arkansas Act, the Texas Equipment
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                  29
    Act, and the Texas DTPA), and that protection of the Dealers under
    these statutes cannot be circumvented by the Choice-of-Law Provi-
    sion. We will therefore consider this contention on appeal. The Deal-
    ers acknowledged in the October Response, however, that one of the
    State Statutes (i.e., the Louisiana Act) does not contain an anti-waiver
    clause. Rather than raising the issue of whether the Louisiana Act sets
    forth a fundamental policy of Louisiana, and therefore trumps the
    Choice-of-Law Provision, the Dealers asserted that the Act governs
    CLM’s Dealer Agreement because of the Local Law Provision.
    Although the Dealers failed to assert in the district court that the Loui-
    siana Act expresses a fundamental policy of Louisiana, the court
    addressed this point in determining whether the Louisiana Act pre-
    cluded Volvo’s termination of the CLM Dealer Agreement without
    cause. Opinion at 554. Because the question of whether the Louisiana
    Act expresses fundamental state policy was decided by the district
    court, that issue is properly before us on appeal. Home Health Servs.,
    Inc. v. Currie, 
    706 F.2d 497
    , 498 (4th Cir. 1983) (observing that issue
    may be considered on appeal if it was argued below or specifically
    decided by district court).
    We next consider whether the Substantial Relationship issue was
    properly raised below. On this point, the pleadings fail to plainly
    encompass the contention that there is no substantial relationship
    between the law selected under the Choice-of-Law Provision, on the
    one hand, and the parties or the Dealer Agreements, on the other. We
    therefore agree with the district court — the Dealers did not properly
    raise the Substantial Relationship issue below. Opinion at 542 n.5.
    Moreover, the Dealers have presented us with no reason to believe
    that declining to address this issue on appeal will result in a miscar-
    riage of justice.
    b.
    Next, before assessing whether the State Statutes constitute funda-
    mental policies of Arkansas, Louisiana, or Texas and thus govern the
    Dealer Agreements, we must decide whether the Dealers are protected
    parties under those statutes. If a Dealer is protected by one of the
    State Statutes, we must then determine whether the statute also
    applies to Champion Motor Graders.
    30            VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    (1)
    We first consider whether FEC can assert a claim under the Texas
    Equipment Act, which provides that a manufacturer may not termi-
    nate a dealer agreement except for cause. Tex. Bus. & Com. Code
    § 19.41. As the district court ruled, however, FEC cannot state a claim
    under the Texas Equipment Act because FEC is not a party protected
    by it. When FEC acquired its Champion dealership in 1996, the Texas
    Equipment Act excluded from its protection those "person[s] whose
    principal business is the sale of off-road construction equipment." 
    Id. § 19.01(5)
    (originally enacted as Act of May 19, 1991, 72nd Leg., ch.
    119, § 1), amended by Act of Sept. 1, 1999, 76th Leg., ch. 725, § 2.
    The court concluded that FEC could not state a claim under the Texas
    Equipment Act because Champion Motor Graders constituted off-
    road construction equipment.22 Opinion at 553. We agree. Because
    FEC is unable to state a claim under the Texas Equipment Act, we
    need not address the question of whether its provisions constitute a
    fundamental policy of Texas.
    (2)
    We next turn to the issue of whether FEC can state a claim under
    the Texas DTPA, which provides protection only to "consumers." See
    Kennedy v. Sale, 
    689 S.W.2d 890
    , 892-93 (Tex. 1985) (noting that
    DTPA is designed to protect only "consumers," as that term is defined
    therein). Under the DTPA, "a consumer is one who seeks or acquires,
    by purchase or lease, any goods or services." Rayford v. Maselli, 
    73 S.W.3d 410
    , 411 (Tex. App. 2002) (citing Tex. Bus. & Com. Code
    Ann. § 17.45(4)). On appeal, FEC maintains that it is a consumer
    under the DTPA, and that the district court erred in ruling that it could
    22
    In 1999, the Texas Legislature amended the Texas Equipment Act so
    that a "dealer" under the Act included dealers engaged in the retail sale
    of off-road construction equipment. The Legislature provided, however,
    that "[a]n agreement entered into before the effective date of this Act
    [Sept. 1, 1999] is governed by the law in effect on the date the agreement
    was entered into . . . ." 1999 Tex. Gen. Laws § 4, 76th Leg., Ch. 725
    (emphasis added). FEC acquired its Champion dealership in 1996; thus
    the 1999 amendments to the Texas Equipment Act have no application
    to its Dealer Agreement.
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                   31
    not state a claim under that statute. In assessing whether the court
    erred in so ruling, we must ascertain and follow the substantive law
    of Texas. See 
    Erie, 304 U.S. at 78-79
    .
    In its Opinion, the court relied heavily on the Texas decision in
    Fisher Controls International, Inc. v. Gibbons, 
    911 S.W.2d 135
    (Tex.
    App. 1995), and it ruled that FEC was not a consumer under the DTPA.23
    In Fisher, the owner ("Gibbons") of a company engaged in the resale
    of valves and instruments ("ACI") sued the company’s supplier
    ("Fisher"), alleging a violation of the DTPA. ACI was an independent
    sales representative for Fisher. In his DTPA claim, Gibbons alleged
    that Fisher had falsely promised to extend ACI’s agreement beyond
    the three years expressly provided in its contract, and that Fisher
    failed to inform ACI of Fisher’s long-term business plan to terminate
    its independent representatives (such as ACI). 
    Id. at 139
    n.1.
    Although the jury found for Gibbons, the trial court granted judgment
    notwithstanding the verdict, concluding that ACI was not a consumer
    under the DTPA.
    The Texas Court of Appeals began its analysis of whether ACI was
    a consumer by noting that ACI was authorized, under the agreement,
    to "buy Fisher products at a discount and resell them on its own
    behalf." 
    Id. at 139
    . The court ruled, however, that despite being
    authorized to buy Fisher products, ACI was not a consumer under the
    DTPA. The court observed that ACI’s DTPA complaint was premised
    on ACI’s "intangible property right . . . to act as Fisher’s sales repre-
    sentative under the ‘Representative Agreement,’" rather than the qual-
    ity of Fisher’s products. 
    Id. at 138-39.
    In ruling for Volvo, the district
    23
    The Supreme Court of Texas, the court possessing the final authority
    in all Texas civil cases, has not addressed the issue of whether, pursuant
    to a dealer agreement analogous to FEC’s, a vendee is a consumer under
    the DTPA. Because there is no reason to believe the Supreme Court of
    Texas would disagree with the Texas Court of Appeals (an intermediate
    appellate court of Texas) on this issue, we must rely on that court in dis-
    cerning Texas law. See West v. Am. Tel. & Tel. Co., 
    311 U.S. 223
    , 237
    (1940) (holding that state intermediate appellate court’s judgment on rule
    of law is datum for ascertaining state law and should not be disregarded
    by federal court unless it is convinced by persuasive data that highest
    court of state would decide otherwise).
    32            VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    court concluded that the Fisher decision was controlling because
    there is no material distinction between the arrangement in Fisher and
    the arrangement between FEC and Volvo.24 We agree. FEC’s com-
    plaint is based on its asserted intangible right to be a Champion
    dealer, not the quality of Champion Motor Graders. Opinion at 552.
    FEC maintains that, under the Texas decision in Texas Cookie Co.
    v. Hendricks & Peralta, 
    747 S.W.2d 873
    (Tex. App. 1988), it is none-
    theless a consumer protected by the Texas DTPA. Under Texas
    Cookie, a business possessing an intangible right analogous to that in
    Fisher (i.e., the contract right to be a dealer of a manufacturer’s goods
    in a certain geographic area) may be a consumer under the DTPA if
    (1) the business purchased the intangible right, and (2) the business’s
    decision to purchase the right was motivated, in part, by its desire to
    obtain collateral services under the dealer agreement. 
    Fisher, 911 S.W.2d at 139
    (citing Tex. 
    Cookie, 747 S.W.2d at 876-77
    ).
    FEC is not a consumer under the DTPA, however, because FEC
    did not purchase an intangible right to be a Champion dealer, and the
    collateral services provided under the Dealer Agreement were merely
    incidental to the agreement. See 
    id. (concluding that,
    because collat-
    eral services provided ACI under contact were incidental to transac-
    tion rather than its objective, ACI was not consumer under DTPA).
    As the district court observed, FEC does not allege that it paid for an
    intangible right to continue to be a Champion dealer, and no payment
    is reflected in the Dealer Agreement. Opinion at 552. In addition,
    receipt of collateral services provided to FEC by Champion was not
    an objective of the Dealer Agreement. The collateral services Cham-
    pion provided to the Dealers included sales advice, catalogues, manu-
    als, instruction booklets, and advertising signs, and the Dealer
    Agreement provided that all demonstration equipment furnished by
    Champion "remain[s] the property of Champion." FEC Dealer Agree-
    ment § 14. These collateral services were, therefore, merely incidental
    to FEC’s objective of being an authorized Champion dealer, and the
    24
    Under both the dealer agreement in Fisher and FEC’s Dealer Agree-
    ment, the relationship between the manufacturer and dealer was that of
    vendor and vendee. FEC Dealer Agreement § 21. And like the valves and
    instruments provided to ACI by Fisher, Champion Motor Graders were
    sold to FEC at dealer net prices for resale. 
    Id. §§ 9.1,
    12.4.
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                 33
    court properly determined that FEC was not a consumer under the
    DTPA. Opinion at 552. As such, FEC is unable to assert a claim
    under the DTPA, and we need not reach the issue of whether the
    DTPA constitutes a fundamental policy of Texas.
    (3)
    Next, we assess whether Clark or CLM can state a claim under the
    Arkansas Act or the Louisiana Act, respectively. In the district court,
    Volvo maintained that Clark was not protected by the Arkansas Act
    and that CLM was not protected by the Louisiana Act because, pursu-
    ant to the Choice-of-Law Provision, Clark’s and CLM’s Dealer
    Agreements are governed by South Carolina law. Volvo did not, how-
    ever, assert that the statutes in question, by their terms, fail to apply
    to Clark’s or CLM’s Dealer Agreements. Absent the Choice-of-Law
    Provision, Clark could state a claim under the Arkansas Act, and
    CLM could state a claim under the Louisiana Act. We must therefore
    decide whether either statute embodies a fundamental state policy.
    c.
    Under the Second Restatement, North Carolina will not honor a
    choice-of-law provision if the law of the chosen state is contrary to
    the fundamental policy of a state possessing a greater interest in the
    issue than the chosen state (the "Fundamental Policy" test). See Cable
    Tel 
    Servs., 574 S.E.2d at 33-34
    (quoting § 187 and noting that it has
    been incorporated into North Carolina common law). Pursuant
    thereto, unless the Choice-of-Law Provision in either Clark’s or
    CLM’s Dealer Agreement satisfies the Fundamental Policy test, it
    does not deprive Clark or CLM of protection under the Arkansas Act
    or the Louisiana Act, respectively.
    In this regard, Clark and CLM maintain that Volvo’s termination
    of their Dealer Agreements without cause contravenes fundamental
    state policies. More specifically, they contend that the law selected
    under the Choice-of-Law Provision is contrary to the Arkansas Act
    and the Louisiana Act, that these statutes constitute fundamental state
    policy, and that the Choice-of-Law Provision therefore fails the Fun-
    damental Policy test.
    34            VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    In order to determine whether the law selected under the Choice-
    of-Law Provision fails the Fundamental Policy test, we must first
    determine whether either the Arkansas Act or the Louisiana Act
    expresses a fundamental state policy. In addressing this issue, we
    begin with the proposition that not every statutory provision consti-
    tutes a fundamental policy of a state. Cherokee Pump & Equip. Inc.
    v. Aurora Pump, 
    38 F.3d 246
    , 252 (5th Cir. 1994) ("The law of a state
    and its public policy are not necessarily synonymous. Not every law
    enacted by the legislature embodies the ‘public policy’ of the state.").25
    (1)
    In assessing whether a dealer protection statute expresses a state’s
    fundamental policy, we are guided by the language of the statute, rel-
    evant court decisions, and pertinent legislative history.26 In particular
    here, we are aided by several recent decisions of our sister circuits
    regarding similar controversies. See Cromeens, 
    2003 WL 22519825
    (determining that Maine franchise statute evidenced strong public pol-
    icy against contracts violating franchise law, and that protection under
    such statute may not be waived); Wright-Moore Corp. v. Ricoh Corp.,
    
    908 F.2d 128
    (7th Cir. 1990) (determining that Indiana franchise law
    expressed fundamental policy, and that protection under Indiana fran-
    chise law may not be waived); Modern Computer Sys., Inc. v. Modern
    Banking Sys., Inc., 
    871 F.2d 734
    (8th Cir. 1989) (en banc) (holding
    that protection under Minnesota franchise law may be waived because
    law does not embody fundamental policy); Tele-Save Merch. Co. v.
    Consumers Distrib. Co., Ltd., 
    814 F.2d 1120
    (6th Cir. 1987) (holding
    25
    If every statutory provision expressed a state’s fundamental policy,
    contracting parties would be entitled to apply the law of another state
    under the Second Restatement only when the law of the chosen state was
    the same as that of the state where the contract was made. Cherokee
    Pump & Equip. 
    Inc., 38 F.3d at 252
    (characterizing such proposition as
    "ridiculous").
    26
    We note that, in assessing whether the Arkansas Act or the Louisiana
    Act embodies a fundamental state policy, we would be bound by any rel-
    evant precedent of the Arkansas or Louisiana courts. Because there is
    none, and because our Court has not heretofore addressed such an issue,
    we are constrained to examine the decisions of our sister circuits address-
    ing these and similar dealer protection statutes.
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                 35
    that protection under Ohio business statute may be waived because
    statute does not embody fundamental policy).
    The Sixth, Seventh, and Eighth Circuits have, in their analyses of
    similar issues, focused on whether state dealer protection statutes con-
    tain anti-waiver provisions. The Arkansas Act contains such a provi-
    sion, and Clark maintains that its inclusion reflects that the Arkansas
    Act constitutes a fundamental policy of Arkansas.27 In espousing this
    proposition, Clark relies primarily on the Seventh Circuit’s decision
    in Wright-Moore. There, the court held that an Indiana franchise stat-
    ute containing an anti-waiver provision constituted a fundamental pol-
    icy of Indiana and barred contracting parties from opting out of its
    protection "whether directly through waiver provisions or indirectly
    through choice of law." 
    Wright-Moore, 908 F.2d at 132
    . As the Sixth
    and Eight Circuits have observed, however, the presence of a statu-
    tory anti-waiver provision does not necessarily mean that a statute
    embodies a state’s fundamental policy. See Tele-Save, 
    814 F.2d 1120
    ;
    Modern Computer, 
    871 F.2d 734
    .
    There is no established rule for determining whether a state policy
    is fundamental. Although the presence of an anti-waiver provision
    does not necessarily mean that a dealer protection statute embodies a
    fundamental policy, such a provision suggests the importance the leg-
    islature attached to the statute. The strength of anti-waiver provisions
    in dealer protection statutes, however, varies among the states.
    
    Wright-Moore, 908 F.2d at 134
    . Following the lead of our sister cir-
    cuits, we will determine whether the Arkansas Act expresses funda-
    mental policy by first assessing the strength of its anti-waiver
    provision. See 
    Wright-Moore, 908 F.2d at 134
    ; Modern 
    Computer, 871 F.2d at 738
    ; 
    Tele-Save, 814 F.2d at 1122-23
    ; see also Jeffries v.
    Woodruff County, 
    205 S.W.2d 194
    , 196 (Ark. 1947) (observing that,
    in Arkansas, public policy is determined by examining constitution,
    statutes, and court decisions). We will also focus on any legislative
    history indicating whether the Arkansas Act was intended to embody
    a fundamental policy of Arkansas. See Cromeens, 
    2003 WL 22519825
    , at *9-10; see also Jordan v. Atl. Cas. Ins. Co., 
    40 S.W.3d 254
    , 257 (Ark. 2001) (observing that, in Arkansas, determination of
    27
    Unlike the Arkansas Act, the Louisiana Act does not contain an anti-
    waiver provision.
    36            VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    public policy lies almost exclusively with legislature, and courts
    should not interfere with that determination absent palpable error).
    Because the Louisiana Act does not have an anti-waiver provision, we
    must, in seeking to determine whether the Act was intended to
    embody a fundamental policy of Louisiana, focus on its provisions
    and on any relevant court decisions.
    (2)
    In assessing whether the Louisiana Act constitutes a fundamental
    policy of Louisiana, we look to pertinent Louisiana judicial and legis-
    lative authorities. Because the Louisiana courts have not addressed
    this issue, our analysis is limited to the text of the statute. Cherokee
    
    Pump, 38 F.3d at 253
    (observing that court decisions fail to show that
    Louisiana Act reflects public policy of Louisiana). Unlike the dealer
    protection statutes of certain other states, the Louisiana Act does not
    contain an anti-waiver provision. More importantly, nothing in the
    Act indicates that it was enacted to foster or protect a fundamental
    policy of Louisiana. See Cherokee 
    Pump, 38 F.3d at 253
    (observing
    that Louisiana Act fails to indicate that "strongly held belief" or "pub-
    lic policy" of Louisiana was being fostered or protected by its enact-
    ment). In this regard, the Louisiana legislature clearly understood the
    significance of a statutory provision indicating that a statute repre-
    sents important state policy. For example, in the Louisiana Oilfield
    Indemnity Act, the legislature indicated its intent "to declare null and
    void and against public policy of the state of Louisiana any provision
    in any agreement which requires defense and/or indemnification, for
    death or bodily injury to persons, where there is negligence or fault
    . . . on the part of the indemnitee . . . ." La. Rev. Stat. § 9:2780
    (emphasis added). No such provision is found in the Louisiana Act.
    In the absence of an anti-waiver provision in the statute, and there
    being no legislative finding that the Louisiana Act constitutes an
    important, much less a fundamental, state policy, we agree with the
    Fifth Circuit that the Act cannot override a choice-of-law contract
    provision precluding its application. Cherokee 
    Pump, 38 F.3d at 252
    .
    Because the body of law selected in CLM’s Choice-of-Law Provision
    does not fail the Fundamental Policy test, that law, rather than the
    Louisiana Act, governs the obligations of the parties.
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                  37
    (3)
    Finally, we turn to the issue of whether the Arkansas Act embodies
    a fundamental policy of Arkansas. The Arkansas courts have not
    addressed this issue. We begin our analysis, therefore, by examining
    the text of the Arkansas Act. That Act, unlike the Louisiana Act, con-
    tains an anti-waiver provision, which provides that a franchisor may
    not "require a franchisee at the time of entering into a franchise agree-
    ment to assent to a . . . waiver . . . which would relieve any person
    from liability imposed by [the Arkansas Act]." Ark. Code § 4-72-
    206(1). Although the inclusion of an anti-waiver provision in the
    Arkansas Act is indicative of the importance the Arkansas legislature
    attached to the statute, we see nothing in the provision itself to indi-
    cate that the legislature intended the Act to embody the state’s funda-
    mental policy.
    The Seventh Circuit recently addressed a similar situation in Crom-
    eens, in which it analyzed the anti-waiver provision of the Maine
    Franchise Law for Power Equipment, Machinery and Appliances (10
    M.R.S.A. § 1361, et seq.; the "Maine Law").28 Like the anti-waiver
    provision of the Arkansas Act, there was nothing in the anti-waiver
    provision of the Maine Law to indicate that the legislature intended
    the statute to embody fundamental policy. As the court observed in
    Cromeens, however, a legislature simplifies the task of determining
    whether a state statute embodies fundamental policy when it
    expressly states that the statute constitutes such policy. Cromeens,
    
    2003 WL 22519825
    , at *9. In Cromeens, the Seventh Circuit discov-
    ered that the Maine legislature had rendered the court’s task "exceed-
    ingly easy" by including in the Maine Law a section entitled "Public
    Policy." 
    Id. The "Public
    Policy" section of the Maine Law provides
    that "[a] contract . . . or activity undertaken pursuant to a contract in
    violation of this chapter is deemed against public policy and is void
    and unenforceable." 10 M.R.S.A. § 1368. Relying on this section, the
    court held that the Maine Law "evidences a strong public policy
    against contracts that violate the franchise law generally," and that,
    28
    Pursuant to the anti-waiver provision of the Maine Law, it is unlaw-
    ful for a manufacturer, without good cause, "[t]o cancel . . . a franchise
    relationship with a distributor or dealer, notwithstanding . . . the terms
    or provisions of a waiver . . . ." 10 M.R.S.A. § 1363(3)(B).
    38               VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    because Maine has expressed a strong public policy against allowing
    choice-of-law provisions to prevail over the statute, franchisees could
    not waive protection under the Maine Law. Cromeens, 
    2003 WL 22519825
    , at *10.
    In determining whether the Arkansas Act embodies a fundamental
    policy of Arkansas, we will conduct an analysis like that utilized by
    the Cromeens court. As the Supreme Court of Arkansas has observed,
    the "public policy [of Arkansas] is declared by the General Assem-
    bly." W. World Ins. Co., Inc. v. Branch, 
    965 S.W.2d 760
    , 762 (Ark.
    1998). And the Arkansas legislature, in the Arkansas Act’s emer-
    gency clause (the "Emergency Clause"), included a provision analo-
    gous to the "Public Policy" section of the Maine Law.29 In the
    Emergency Clause, the legislature expressly declared that cancellation
    of franchise agreements in Arkansas, absent good cause, was "vitally
    affect[ing] the . . . public welfare." 1977 Ark. Acts 355, § 13. More
    specifically, the Emergency Clause asserted that franchisors, "without
    good cause and to the great prejudice and harm of the citizens of the
    State of Arkansas, [were] cancell[ing] existing franchise agreements."
    And it declared that the legislature had enacted the Arkansas Act to
    prevent the cancellation of such franchise agreements without good
    cause, in order to preserve the "public peace, health, and safety" of
    its citizens. Importantly, the Supreme Court of Arkansas has recog-
    nized that the Emergency Clause shows that the legislature "designed
    the [Arkansas Act] for the protection of the public," and it has
    acknowledged that the purpose of the Arkansas Act is revealed in its
    Emergency Clause. Dr. Pepper Bottling Co. of Paragould v. Frantz,
    29
    The requirements for enacting an emergency clause in Arkansas are
    explained in Amendment 7 to the Arkansas Constitution:
    If it shall be necessary for the preservation of the public peace,
    health and safety that a measure shall become effective without
    delay, such necessity shall be stated in one section, and if upon
    a yea and nay vote two-thirds of all members elected to each
    house . . . shall vote upon separate roll call in favor of the mea-
    sure going into immediate operation, such emergency measure
    shall become effective without delay.
    Ark. Const. amend. 7. In interpreting an Arkansas statute, courts may
    look to the emergency clause to determine legislative intent. Quinney v.
    Pittman, 
    895 S.W.2d 538
    , 542 (Ark. 1995).
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                39
    
    842 S.W.2d 37
    , 41 (Ark. 1992). In sum, like the "Public Policy" pro-
    vision of the Maine Law, the Emergency Clause of the Arkansas Act
    constitutes a compelling statement of Arkansas policy.
    In these circumstances, the anti-waiver provision of the Arkansas
    Act, considered in conjunction with the declarations made in the
    Emergency Clause, renders the termination of a dealer agreement,
    absent good cause, a violation of the fundamental policy of Arkansas.
    And Arkansas has a materially greater interest than South Carolina in
    determining whether a dealer agreement between an Arkansas dealer
    and an out-of-state manufacturer can be terminated without cause.
    Thus, under the Fundamental Policy test, Clark’s Dealer Agreement
    is governed by the Arkansas Act. We must therefore assess whether
    Volvo’s termination of Clark’s Dealer Agreement was permissible
    under the Arkansas Act.
    d.
    Volvo maintains that, even if Clark’s Dealer Agreement is gov-
    erned by the Arkansas Act, it did not violate the Act because the
    Dealer Agreement was terminated for good cause. More specifically,
    Volvo contends that its legitimate business objective of consolidating
    its network of motor-grader dealers satisfies the good cause standard
    of the Arkansas Act. Indeed, in the Cromeens controversy, AB Volvo,
    Volvo Excavators AB, and Volvo Construction Equipment NV (col-
    lectively, "AB Volvo") made a similar argument to the Seventh Cir-
    cuit. And AB Volvo, like Volvo here, maintained that it possessed
    good cause to terminate its dealers because it had withdrawn from the
    market the heavy equipment sold by those dealers. Cromeens, 
    2003 WL 22519825
    , at *10.
    In this appeal, Volvo maintains that it possessed good cause to ter-
    minate Clark’s Dealer Agreement because it withdrew the Champion
    Motor Graders from the market. Volvo acknowledges that, although
    the Maine Law assessed in Cromeens provided that "[t]here is good
    cause [for termination of a franchise] when the manufacturer discon-
    tinues production or distribution of the franchise goods," 10 M.R.S.A.
    § 1363(3)(C)(4), the Arkansas Act contains no such provision. Volvo
    maintains, however, that circumstances other than those enumerated
    40              VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    in the Arkansas Act may constitute good cause, and it contends that
    a market withdrawal is such a circumstance.
    Clark, on the other hand, asserts that, even if the list of what may
    constitute good cause under the Arkansas Act is not exhaustive, and
    even if a market withdrawal may constitute good cause for a franchise
    termination, Volvo did not in fact withdraw the Champion Motor
    Graders from the market. Clark contends that, because the motor
    graders currently manufactured by Volvo have not been significantly
    reengineered, Volvo has not withdrawn Champion Motor Graders
    from the market. More specifically, Clark maintains that Volvo has
    simply rebranded the Champion Motor Graders and that it is selling
    them as Volvo graders. And, according to Clark, such rebranding
    does not constitute a market withdrawal. Clark contends, therefore,
    that even if a market withdrawal may constitute good cause under the
    Arkansas Act, Volvo did not possess good cause for terminating its
    Dealer Agreement.
    In these circumstances, a genuine factual dispute exists as to
    whether Volvo possessed good cause, under the Arkansas Act, to ter-
    minate Clark’s Dealer Agreement. We therefore remand Clark’s stat-
    utory claim (in the Arkansas Litigation) and its statutory counterclaim
    (in the North Carolina Litigation) for the district court’s assessment
    of whether, pursuant to the Arkansas Act, Volvo terminated Clark’s
    Dealer Agreement without good cause.
    IV.
    Pursuant to the foregoing, we affirm the district court except as to
    Clark’s statutory claim in the Arkansas Litigation and its statutory
    counterclaim in the North Carolina Litigation. We vacate the judg-
    ment on those two claims only, and we remand for such further pro-
    ceedings as may be appropriate.
    AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART,
    AND REMANDED
    WIDENER, Circuit Judge, concurring and dissenting:
    I concur in part and respectfully dissent in part.
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                    41
    I agree with the result reached by the majority except the treatment
    of CLM’s claim under the Louisiana Act and the claim of Future
    Equipment Company under the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices and
    Consumer Act. In my opinion, the decision of the district court as to
    those claims should be vacated, and as to them should be remanded
    to the district court for further consideration.
    I.
    The key provision in CLM’s dealer agreement with Volvo is the
    Local Law Provision, or section 30 of the dealer agreement. The
    Local Law Provision provides as follows:
    The rights and obligations of the parties hereto shall be sub-
    ject to all applicable laws, orders, regulations, directions,
    restrictions and limitations of governments and governmen-
    tal agencies having jurisdiction over the parties hereto. In
    the event that any law, order, regulation, direction, restric-
    tion or limitation, appropriation . . . or interpretation thereof
    shall, in the judgment of either party hereto, substantially
    alter the relationship between the parties under this Agree-
    ment or the advantages derived from such relationship,
    either party may request the other party hereto to modify
    this Agreement. If, within fifteen (15) days subsequent to
    making such request, the parties hereto are unable to agree
    upon a mutually satisfactory modification hereof, then the
    adversely affected party may terminate this Agreement on
    fifteen (15) days’ notice to the other party.
    The Louisiana Act, La. Rev. Stat. Ann. §§ 51:481-82 (West 2003),
    applies to the CLM-Volvo dealer agreement. In Lake Charles Diesel,
    Inc. v. General Motors Corp., 
    328 F.3d 192
    (5th Cir. 2003), the court
    explained the prerequisites necessary for the Louisiana Act to apply.
    For the Louisiana Act to apply in this case, each of the following must
    be present:
    1. A contract or agreement, written or oral;
    42             VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    2. The contract must be between (1) a dealer,1 and (2) an
    agent.2
    3. The dealer must be in the business of selling, distribut-
    ing, or retailing.
    4. The agent must be in the business of wholesaling, man-
    ufacturing, or distributing.
    5. The tangible movable (personal) property that the dealer
    agrees to sell, distribute, or retail and that the agent
    agrees to wholesale, manufacture, or distribute must
    pertain to one or more of five industries only: (1) farm-
    ing; (2) construction; (3) heavy industrial material han-
    dling; (4) utility; or (5) lawn and garden.
    6. The tangible movables that are the objects of the dealer-
    ship contract must be one or more of the following
    types: (1) equipment; (2) engines; (3) implements; (4)
    machinery; or (5) attachments.
    7. In addition to the type or types of equipment that are the
    objects of the dealership contract, the dealer must also
    agree to sell, distribute or retail, and the agent must also
    agree to wholesale, manufacture, or distribute repair
    parts for such equipment.
    8. In the dealership contract, the dealer must agree to
    maintain an inventory of one or more of the following:
    (1) repair parts for the subject tangible movables; or (2)
    the tangible movables themselves; or (3) attachments.
    1
    A dealer is defined by statute to mean "any farm dealer, heavy indus-
    trial equipment dealer, construction equipment dealer, material handling
    equipment dealer, utility equipment dealer, engines equipment dealer,
    lawn and garden equipment dealer or retail equipment distributor dealer."
    La. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 51:481(B)(3) (West 2003).
    2
    An agent is defined by statute to mean "any manufacturer, wholesaler
    or wholesale distributor." La. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 51:481(B)(4) (West
    2003).
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                43
    Lake Charles 
    Diesel, 328 F.3d at 200
    . The CLM-Volvo dealer agree-
    ment fulfills all of these prerequisites. Because the dealer agreement
    fulfills all of the prerequisites outlined by the court in Lake Charles
    Diesel, the substantive sections of Title 51 apply to the dealer agree-
    ment. In particular, § 482 is applicable. Section 482(A)(1) provides
    that:
    [n]o agent, directly through an officer or an employee, may
    terminate, cancel, fail to renew, or substantially change the
    competitive circumstances of a dealership agreement or con-
    tract without good cause.
    La. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 51:482 (West 2003). Accordingly, § 482 is an
    applicable law under the Local Law Provision of the dealer agree-
    ment.
    Under the majority’s interpretation of the Local Law Provision,
    § 482 is not applicable in this case because CLM failed to request a
    modification of its dealer agreement. Maj. Op. at 25-26. But the plain
    language of the Local Law Provision does not require CLM to request
    a modification of the dealer agreement in order to gain the protection
    of § 482. Under the Local Law Provision, either party, either Volvo
    or CLM, could have requested a modification if it believed, "in [its]
    judgment" that a local law would substantially alter the contractual
    relationship between the parties. Neither CLM nor Volvo requested
    a modification. As the majority duly notes in its opinion, Volvo rec-
    ognized that § 482 would alter the relationship between the two par-
    ties:
    According to Volvo, the State Statutes, if applied, would
    effectively nullify the Without Cause Provision, substan-
    tially altering the relationship between Champion and the
    Dealers.
    Maj. Op. at 25-26. Despite this realization, Volvo never sought a
    modification of the contract.
    The Louisiana state legislature added § 482 to Title 51 in 1991. See
    La. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 51:482 (West 2003). Until the time of this addi-
    44            VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    tion, neither CLM nor Volvo was subject to § 482(A)(i), and immedi-
    ately upon enactment, and until 2000, either CLM or Volvo could
    have asked for a modification of the dealer agreement. The reason
    that CLM did not seek such a modification is at once apparent; under
    the dealer agreement, if there had been no applicable local law, the
    agreement could have been terminated under the Without Cause Pro-
    vision of CLM Dealer Agreement § 24. At the time the dealer agree-
    ment was signed in 1984, neither party had any cause to seek a
    modification. The passage of § 482 in 1991 modified the dealer agree-
    ment. CLM had no cause for concern, however, because it derived a
    benefit from § 482. Volvo, as it admits and as the majority notes in
    its opinion, did have its rights and advantages altered by the passage
    of § 482. Maj. Op. at 26. Since Volvo now recognizes the impact of
    § 482, as shown without objection, it could have recognized § 482’s
    significance at any time since 1991, and did not.
    Furthermore, the Local Law Provision provided a method for
    Volvo to alter the dealer agreement to regain any advantages, in its
    judgment it lost by the passage of § 482. The majority opinion holds
    that only CLM bears the burden of requesting a modification of the
    dealer agreement, but as I have noted, the plain language of the Local
    Law Provision does not limit to CLM alone the ability to request a
    modification. The majority interprets the Local Law Provision so that,
    while § 482 alters the relationship of the parties, CLM loses on its
    claims because it did not request a modification. Using the same
    logic, the majority should, with equal facility, reach the opposite con-
    clusion; that because § 482 alters the relationship between the parties,
    Volvo loses because it did not request a modification.
    The majority offers no reason or justification for declaring Volvo
    the winner with respect to the construction of this provision of the
    contract, which, by its literal terms, applies to "either party." Indeed,
    a more logical and reasonable construction of the contract is that in
    the absence of a "request [of] the other party," the literal terms of the
    contract should stand as written and unaltered.
    Under the majority’s reasoning, CLM, as the party benefitting from
    § 482, must call Volvo’s attention to the existence of a provision that
    benefits CLM for the purpose of altering the relationship to the point
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                 45
    where CLM loses the benefit of § 482. Such a departure from human
    nature is not a reasonable contract construction, I suggest.
    II.
    The Local Law Provision, section 30 of the dealer agreement, is
    reconcilable with the Choice of Law Provision in section 29. For
    example, prior to 1991, the Louisiana legislature had not enacted
    § 482. As a result, no local law triggered the application of the Local
    Law Provision. Had there been a contract dispute prior to 1991, it
    would have been governed by South Carolina law. After the passage
    of § 482, the contract is still governed by South Carolina law, except
    that § 482, as an applicable local law, applies as well.
    Yet, under the majority’s interpretation of the contract, the Local
    Law Provision would be surplusage, violating the "universal law of
    contract law that, in construing language in a contract, ‘an interpreta-
    tion that gives a reasonable meaning to all parts of the contract will
    be preferred to one that leaves portions of the contract meaningless.’"
    Island Creek Coal Co. v. Lake Shore, Inc., 
    832 F.2d 274
    , 277 (4th
    Cir. 1987) (quoting United States v. Johnson Controls, Inc., 
    713 F.2d 1541
    , 1555 (Fed. Cir. 1983); see also Union Inv. Co. v. Fidelity &
    Deposit Co. of Ind., 
    549 F.2d 1107
    , 1110 (6th Cir. 1977)). The major-
    ity decision renders meaningless the contractual language in the Local
    Law Provision that "the rights and obligations of the parties . . . shall
    be subject to all applicable local laws."
    In Liverpool & London Steamship Protection & Indemnity Associa-
    tion, Ltd. v. Queen of Leman MV, 
    296 F.3d 350
    (5th Cir. 2002), the
    court faced a contract construction question similar to the one facing
    this court regarding the Local Law Provision and Choice of Law Pro-
    vision in the dealer agreement. Liverpool & London Steamship Pro-
    tection & Indemnity Association, Ltd., (L & L) provided protection
    and indemnity insurance to the owners and operators of the QUEEN
    OF 
    LEMAN. 296 F.3d at 351
    . The insurance contract between the
    parties contained four provisions that affected the choice of law that
    would govern the contract. First, Rule 40 of the contract stated that
    L & L "is entitled to ‘a lien on the ships of a member’ for any unpaid
    premiums." Second, Rule 47 stated that "disputes are to be resolved
    46            VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    either by arbitration or ‘by the English High Court of Justice.’" Third,
    Rule 47C stated that:
    [n]othing herein shall affect or prejudice the right of the
    Association to take action and/or commence proceedings in
    any jurisdiction to enforce its right of lien on ships or to oth-
    erwise obtain security by seizure, attachment or arrest of
    assets for any amounts owed to the Association.
    Finally, Rule 48 provided that
    [t]hese rules and any special terms of entry form a contract
    of insurance between the Association and a member, and
    subject to the right of the Association under Rule 47C to
    enforce its right of lien in any jurisdiction in accordance
    with local law in such a jurisdiction, shall be construed in
    accordance with English law.
    See L & 
    L, 296 F.3d at 353
    .
    L & L filed a complaint in the Eastern District of Louisiana to seize
    the QUEEN OF LEMAN for unpaid insurance 
    premiums. 296 F.3d at 351
    . The district court granted the request, and the vessel was
    arrested and later sold for 
    $512,000.00. 296 F.3d at 351
    . The funds
    from the sale of the vessel were placed in the registry of the district
    court. Two parties, one who insured the vessel’s cargo and one who
    owned the vessel’s cargo, intervened seeking to recover the proceeds
    from the sale. The intervenors argued that the insurance contract cal-
    led for the application of English law, under which L & L could not
    obtain a maritime 
    lien. 296 F.3d at 351
    . The district judge agreed,
    granted summary judgment in favor of the intervenors, and L & L
    appealed to the Fifth 
    Circuit. 296 F.3d at 351-52
    .
    On appeal, the parties agreed "that English law generally governs
    the 
    contract." 296 F.3d at 352
    . They also agreed that the procedure
    for enforcing a lien was governed by the law of the jurisdiction in
    which the lien was being enforced, in this case the United States. The
    parties disagreed over whether English law, as the law that governs
    the contract generally, also determines whether a maritime lien exists.
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                 47
    As the court noted, this disagreement is "significant because even L
    & L admits it would have no maritime lien under English 
    law." 296 F.3d at 352
    . In contrast, the federal Maritime Commercial Instruments
    and Liens Act, 46 U.S.C. §§ 31341-31343, makes a maritime lien
    available for a party who provides necessaries, which includes marine
    insurance in the Fifth Circuit, to a 
    vessel. 296 F.3d at 353
    (citing
    Equilease Corp. v. M/V Sampson, 
    793 F.2d 598
    , 603 (5th Cir. 1986)
    (en banc)). The intervenors sought to persuade the court that the "ref-
    erence to local law in Rules 47C and 48 is limited to the procedural
    aspects of enforcing liens." The argument went that the substantive
    issue of any lien to which L & L may be entitled is governed by
    English law, but L & L may enforce the lien by relying on local pro-
    cedural 
    law. 296 F.3d at 353
    .
    The court disagreed. If the choice of law provision controlled the
    maritime lien, then the provision in Rule 40 authorizing L & L to
    secure a maritime lien would have been rendered meaningless
    because English law did not recognize a maritime 
    lien. 296 F.3d at 353
    . The court explained that
    [i]f English law controls and there is no maritime lien for
    unpaid insurance premiums, then L & L would have little
    need for enforcement provisions, as no right would exist to
    be enforced. . . . We therefore agree with L & L that in order
    to give meaning to the entire contract, the determination of
    whether a maritime lien exists in the first place should be
    determined by United States 
    law. 296 F.3d at 353
    -54. The court thus reversed the district court’s deci-
    sion granting the intervenors’ motion for summary 
    judgment. 296 F.3d at 355
    .
    The Local Law Provision in the dealer agreement is similar to Rule
    47C. By construing the contract to allow the Choice of Law Provision
    to trump another provision in the contract, the majority follows a path
    that the L & L court rejected because it would not give meaning to
    the entire contract. See L & 
    L, 296 F.3d at 353
    -54. Because the Local
    Law Provision can be reconciled with the Choice of Law Provision,
    this court should allow CLM to pursue its rights under § 482, an
    applicable local law.
    48             VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    The dealer agreement should be construed to give effect to all of
    its provisions. See Osteen v. T.E. Cuttino Constr. Co., 
    434 S.E.2d 281
    , 284 (S.C. 1993). The majority’s interpretation gives no effect to
    the Local Law Provision. In my opinion, CLM is entitled to the pro-
    tection of the Louisiana Act, and CLM’s claims and counterclaims
    under the Louisiana Act should be remanded to the district court.
    III.
    On remand, the district court should have South Carolina law and
    the Louisiana Act as the governing law for interpreting the CLM-
    Volvo dealer agreement. The district court should enforce the Louisi-
    ana Act unless there is a rule in North Carolina that prevents the dis-
    trict court from enforcing the Louisiana Act, and no such rule has
    been brought to our attention. Accordingly, the Louisiana Act should
    be enforced by the district court on the basis of the Local Law Provi-
    sion.
    The majority concluded that the CLM dealer agreement is to be
    construed according to South Carolina law. Maj. Op. at 24. The
    majority reached this decision by applying North Carolina’s choice of
    law rules, which enforce choice of law provisions in contracts. Maj.
    Op. at 24; see also Bueltel v. Lumber Mut. Ins. Co., 
    518 S.E.2d 205
    ,
    209 (N.C. App. 1999). South Carolina law, while retaining the rule
    of lex loci contractus,3 also recognizes the right of parties to choose
    another jurisdiction’s law to govern the contract. Associated Spring
    Corp. v. Wilson, 
    410 F. Supp. 967
    , 975 (D.S.C. 1976). The Associated
    Spring Corp. court relied on the following language from the South
    Carolina Supreme Court’s opinion in Livingston v. Atlantic Coast
    Line R. Co., 
    180 S.E. 343
    (S.C. 1935):
    It is fundamental that unless there be something intrinsic in,
    or extrinsic of, the contract that another place of enforce-
    ment was intended, the lex loci contractu governs. If the
    contract be silent thereabout, the presumption is that the law
    3
    The rule of lex loci contractus means "the law of the place where the
    contract is made governs the contract." Joye v. Heuer, 
    813 F. Supp. 1171
    , 1173 (D.S.C. 1993) (citing Livingston v. Atlantic Coast Line R.
    Co., 
    180 S.E. 343
    , 345 (S.C. 1935)).
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                    49
    governing the enforcement is the law of the place where the
    contract is made.
    "The act of the parties in entering into a contract at a partic-
    ular place, in the absence of anything shown to the contrary,
    sufficiently indicates their intention to contract with refer-
    ence to the laws of that place; hence the rule as it usually
    stated is that a contract as to its validity and interpretation
    is governed by the law of the place where it is made, the lex
    loci contractu; or more accurately, that contracts are to be
    governed as to their nature, validity and interpretation by the
    law of the place where they are made, unless the contracting
    parties clearly appear to have had some other place in view."
    13 C.J., 
    248. 180 S.E. at 345
    .
    In Livingston, the South Carolina Supreme Court explained that
    South Carolina law allows parties to choose the law that they want to
    use to enforce their contract. See Associated Spring Corp., 410 F.
    Supp. at 975 (noting that this view is "widely-held and is generally
    in conformity with that of the Restatement (Second) of Conflict of
    Laws § 187 (1971)"). Under the Restatement (Second) of Conflict of
    Laws § 187(2), South Carolina law will govern the contract unless the
    application of the law of the chosen state would be contrary
    to a fundamental policy of a state which has a materially
    greater interest than the chosen state in the determination of
    the particular issue and which, under the rule of § 188,
    would be the state of the applicable law in the absence of
    an effective choice of law by the parties.
    The majority refuses to remand CLM’s claims and counterclaims
    under the Louisiana Act to the district court on the ground that the
    Louisiana Act does not constitute a fundamental policy of Louisiana.
    Maj. Op. at 34-35. In my opinion, this reasoning is not only overly-
    and hyper-technical, it is fundamentally wrong. A statute enacted by
    a state legislature establishes the public policy of that State. See Bibb
    v. Navajo Freight Lines, Inc., 
    359 U.S. 520
    , 524 (1959) ("Policy deci-
    sions are for the state legislature, absent federal entry into the field.");
    50            VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    Barnes Group, Inc. v. C & C Prods., Inc., 
    716 F.2d 1023
    , 1031 (4th
    Cir. 1983) ("[I]t seems apparent that where the law chosen by the par-
    ties would make enforceable a contract flatly unenforceable in the
    state whose law would otherwise apply, to honor the choice-of-law
    provision would trench upon that state’s ‘fundamental policy.’").
    Every state court in the Fourth Circuit has also recognized the state
    legislature as the definitive voice on pronouncements of public policy.
    See Schmeizi v. Schmeizl, 
    46 A.2d 219
    , 621 (Md. 1946) ("The court
    cannot adopt a public policy contrary to the plain provisions of the
    statute."); Pitt & Greene Electric Membership Corp. v. Carolina
    Power & Light Co., 
    120 S.E.2d 749
    , 754 (N.C. 1961) ("[P]ublic pol-
    icy is for legislative determination."); Brown v. Drake, 
    270 S.E.2d 130
    , 132 (S.C. 1980) ("Public policy is basically for the legislature");
    Wood v. Board of Supervisors of Halifax City, 
    236 Va. 104
    , 115
    (1988) ("[I]t is the responsibility of the legislature, not the judiciary,
    to formulate public policy."); State v. Varney, 
    96 S.E.2d 72
    , 76 (W.
    Va. 1956) (". . . the public policy of a state is a law of the state, and
    is a legislative and not a judicial function, and it is not the function
    of the judiciary to declare what is the public policy of the state
    respecting matters on which the legislature has spoken . . .").
    The Supreme Court of Louisiana especially has expressed its opin-
    ion as to whether statutes express the public policy of Louisiana in a
    case involving a state antitrust law. State v. American Sugar Refining
    Co., 
    71 So. 137
    , 142-143 (La. 1916).
    . . . the public policy of a state is to be found in its statutes,
    and, when they have not directly spoken, then in the deci-
    sions of the courts. But, when the Legislature speaks upon
    a subject upon which it has the constitutional power to legis-
    late, public policy is what the statutes passed by it enacts
    public policy to be. The only authentic and admissible evi-
    dence of public policy of a state on any given subject are its
    Constitutions, laws, and judicial decisions. The public pol-
    icy of a state, of which courts take notice and which they
    give effect, must be decided from those sources. Where the
    state has spoken through its legislators, there is no room for
    speculation as to what the policy of the state is.
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                 51
    So, in my opinion, it is beyond argument that the fundamental pol-
    icy of Louisiana is expressed in § 51:482.
    Section 51:482, barring cancellation of the contract without cause,
    was enacted by the Louisiana state legislature. In this circuit, nothing
    else appearing, we must accept that statute as the fundamental public
    policy of Louisiana. See Hall v. McKenzie, 
    537 F.2d 1232
    , 1234 (4th
    Cir. 1976)("[T]he determination of legislative policy for the State of
    West Virginia is for that state and not us."); St. Paul Fire & Marine
    Ins. Co. v. Jacobson, 
    48 F.3d 778
    (4th Cir. 1995) ("[W]e will not
    attempt to decide the public policy of the State of Virginia absent a
    clear and dominant articulation of that policy by the Commonwealth
    herself."). By concluding that the Louisiana Act does not constitute
    a fundamental policy of Louisiana, the majority is making its own
    determination that the Louisiana Act, as a statute, does not express the
    fundamental public policy of Louisiana. Our court cannot determine
    the public policy of Louisiana, even if the Fifth Circuit is willing to
    do so. See St. Paul Fire & 
    Marine, 48 F.3d at 783
    . C.f. Cherokee
    Pump & Equipment, Inc. v. Aurora Pump, 
    38 F.3d 246
    , 252-53 (5th
    Cir. 1994). Instead, the Louisiana state statute must be viewed as the
    fundamental public policy of that State.
    Whatever the Fifth Circuit may have decided, Cherokee Pump is
    a flawed authority on which to rest our decision. Cherokee Pump
    
    recites, 38 F.3d at 253
    , that "There is no case law evidencing that the
    Repurchase Statute amendment espouses public policy in Louisiana."
    Along the same line, the majority in this case recites that "The Louisi-
    ana courts have not addressed this issue," referring to whether the
    Louisiana statute is a fundamental policy of Louisiana. Although
    State v. American Sugar Refining Co., 
    71 So. 137
    (La. 1916) has been
    in full force and virtue in that State for some 88 years and has not
    been modified or overruled, both the Fifth Circuit and the majority
    here persist in their reasoning that the subject has not been addressed
    by the Louisiana courts. To repeat, American Sugar stated:
    But, when the Legislature speaks upon a subject upon which
    it has the constitutional power to legislate, public policy is
    what the statutes passed by it enacts public policy to 
    be. 71 So. at 142
    . That certainly should end the discussion, but just as
    Cherokee Pump did not mention American Sugar, so the majority
    52           VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    here does not. Such omission, both by the Fifth Circuit and this court,
    is flawed reasoning, I suggest.
    If that were not enough, and of even more importance, the case of
    Barnes Group, Inc. v. C & C Prods., Inc., 
    716 F.2d 1023
    (4th Cir.
    1983), is on facts which are indistinguishable from those at hand, and,
    on the same question, determines that where the law chosen by the
    parties would make enforceable a contract flatly unenforceable in the
    State whose law would otherwise apply, "the choice of law provision
    would trench upon that State’s ‘fundamental 
    policy.’" 716 F.2d at 1031
    . Barnes Group was a case in which Barnes, the plaintiff, alleged
    that C & C, the defendant, had interfered with Barnes’ contracts with
    six of Barnes’ sales agents. Barnes was an Ohio company, and its
    contracts with its agents provided that they should be construed in
    accordance with the laws of the State of Ohio. Three of the salesmen,
    however, were from Alabama, and their territories were exclusively
    in Alabama. The contract of employment, which included a covenant
    not to compete, was void as against public policy under Alabama law
    and could not be enforced. The holding of this court was:
    To honor the contractual choice of law would make enforce-
    able a contract flatly unenforceable in Alabama, surely
    impinging upon "fundamental policy" of Alabama. It was
    error, therefore, for the district court to apply Ohio law to
    determine the enforceability of the Alabama salesmen’s
    covenants not to 
    compete. 716 F.2d at 1032
    . Applying the facts of this case to the holdings of
    Barnes Group, the law chosen by the parties, South Carolina, would
    permit a contractual provision for cancellation to be without notice,
    and would make enforceable in Louisiana a contract "flatly unen-
    forceable" in Louisiana under § 51:482, the law of that State. The
    holding of Barnes Group is that such a choice-of-law provision would
    "trench upon [Louisiana’s] ‘fundamental 
    policy.’" 716 F.2d at 1031
    .
    And the impinging of the fundamental policy of Louisiana, error here
    as there, means that the statute of Louisiana, § 51:482, must be
    applied. Louisiana is the State in which the dealership is located, and
    which even the majority in this case agrees had a greater interest than
    the chosen State of South Carolina.
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                 53
    Applying the rule of § 187(b) Restatement (Second) Conflict of
    Laws to this case indicates that the Louisiana Act should apply, for
    if the "application of the law of the chosen state would be contrary
    to a fundamental policy of a state which has a materially greater inter-
    est than the chosen state in the determination of the particular issue"
    the law of South Carolina should not apply. I have just demonstrated
    that the fundamental policy of Louisiana is expressed in the statute
    requiring that such contracts not be cancelled by the manufacturer
    without cause. It is also beyond doubt that Louisiana has a materially
    greater interest than South Carolina in determining whether a dealer
    agreement between a Louisiana dealer and an out-of-state manufac-
    turer can be terminated without cause. The majority holds just that
    with relation to the Arkansas dealer,4 and no reason is apparent why
    the Louisiana dealer should be treated differently on what are essen-
    tially the same facts. The only difference in the two statutes is that
    Arkansas has some kind of anti-waiver provision mentioned by the
    majority, but even Arkansas does not have an opinion of its Supreme
    Court taking nearly so strong a stand as the position of the Louisiana
    court in American Sugar that statutes reflect the fundamental policy
    of Louisiana. In my opinion, the clearly implicit holding of the major-
    ity, that a statute without an anti-waiver provision is not the funda-
    mental policy of a State, is clearly wrong.
    IV.
    I am further of opinion that the claim of Future Equipment Com-
    pany, Inc. under the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices and Consumer
    Protection Act, Vernon’s Texas Statutes and Codes Ann., Title II,
    § 17.41, et seq., should be re-examined on the merits.
    This case is a result of a "judgment on the pleadings," A.486, and
    not based on depositions, affidavits, etc., a factual development, as is
    the more usual case.
    4
    "And Arkansas has a materially greater interest than South Carolina
    in determining whether a dealer agreement between an Arkansas dealer
    and an out of state manufacturer can be terminated without cause." Maj.
    Op. at 39.
    54            VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.
    For the purposes of the court’s consideration of the motion
    [for judgment on the pleadings], all of the well pleaded fac-
    tual allegations in the adversary’s pleadings are assumed to
    be true, and all contravening assertions in the movant’s
    pleadings are taken to be false.
    5A Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and
    Procedure 520 (2d. ed. 1990) relying on National Metropolitan Bank
    of U.S., 
    323 U.S. 454
    , 457 (1945) and various cases from the federal
    courts of appeals and district courts. In Count III of the Arkansas
    complaint found in this appendix at A.298, the following allegation
    is made by Future Equipment Company:
    53. At all times material to this action, FEC was a ‘busi-
    ness consumer’ as that term is defined in the Texas Decep-
    tive Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Act
    (‘DTPA’), Tex. Bus. & Com. Code, § 17.41, et seq., in that
    FEC is a corporation or business that sought and/or acquired
    goods or services by purchase or lease, and the goods or ser-
    vices formed the basis of their claims.
    Section 17.45 (10) provides that:
    ‘Business Consumer’ means an individual, partnership or
    corporation who seeks or acquires by purchase or lease, any
    goods or services for commercial or business use. The term
    does not include this state or a subdivision or agency of this
    state.
    So, for the purposes of judgment on the pleadings under Rule 12, as
    here, we must consider that FEC is a "business consumer, a corpora-
    tion who seeks or acquires by purchase or lease . . . goods or services
    for commercial or business use." That is sufficient to qualify Future
    Equipment to have its claim examined under the Texas Deceptive
    Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Act under Texas law as
    found in Fisher Controls Intern., Inc. v. Givens, 
    911 S.W. 2d
    . 135
    (Tx. App. 1995) and Texas Cookie Co. v. Hendricks & Peralta, 
    747 S.W. 2d
    . 873 (Tx. App. 1988). Briefly, Texas Cookie held that the
    fact that the transfer agreement "involved the transfer of ‘goods or
    services’ for purpose of the DTPA," Texas 
    Cookie, 747 S.W. at 877
    ,
    VOLVO CONSTRUCTION EQUIP. v. CLM EQUIP.                 55
    qualified Hendricks for relief under the Texas Deceptive Trade Prac-
    tices and Consumer Act, the same statute involved here.
    This is not to say that a future factual development may not add to
    the facts favorable to Future Equipment or to the facts favorable to
    Volvo. But it is clear that judgment in favor of Volvo should not have
    been entered on the pleadings which admit the necessary facts, and
    that the case on remand should require examination and development
    of that aspect or Future Equipment’s claim.
    In all events, if the majority holding is correct, that Future Equip-
    ment loses because "FEC does not allege that it paid for an intangible
    right to continue to be a champion dealer and no payment is reflected
    in the dealer agreement," there would have been no dealership con-
    tract to cancel, and this case is nothing more than an exercise for the
    lawyers.