David Schwartz v. Rent A Wreck of America, Inc. , 603 F. App'x 142 ( 2015 )


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  •                               UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 13-2189
    DAVID SCHWARTZ, d/b/a Rent A Wreck; RENT A WRECK INC., d/b/a
    Bundy Auto Sales,
    Plaintiffs – Appellees,
    v.
    RENT A WRECK OF AMERICA, INC.; BUNDY AMERICAN, LLC,
    Defendants – Appellants,
    and
    J.J.F MANAGEMENT SERVICES, INC.,
    Defendant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of
    Maryland, at Baltimore.     Peter J. Messitte, Senior District
    Judge. (1:07-cv-01679-PJM)
    Argued:   January 27, 2015                  Decided:   March 10, 2015
    Before WILKINSON, KING, and DUNCAN, Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed by unpublished opinion.        Judge Duncan wrote       the
    opinion, in which Judge Wilkinson and Judge King joined.
    ARGUED: Daniel Janssen, QUARLES & BRADY LLP, Milwaukee,
    Wisconsin, for Appellants.    Roger Charles Simmons, GORDON &
    SIMMONS, LLC, Frederick, Maryland, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: E.
    King Poor, QUARLES & BRADY LLP, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, for
    Appellants. Jacob I. Weddle, GORDON & SIMMONS, LLC, Frederick,
    Maryland, for Appellees.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    2
    DUNCAN, Circuit Judge:
    This case comes before us a second time.                        On remand from
    our first opinion, a jury found that the parties’ implied-in-
    fact franchise agreement does not violate California competition
    law.       Defendants-Appellants Rent-A-Wreck of America, Inc., and
    Bundy American, LLC (collectively, “RAWA”) argue on appeal that
    this       verdict     should    not   stand       because     the     district     court
    misallocated the burden of proof and improperly prevented them
    from presenting to the jury their theory of the case.                             Finding
    no error, we affirm.
    I.
    This appeal presents a dispute between the creators of the
    “Rent-A-Wreck” car rental brand, Plaintiffs-Appellees David S.
    Schwartz and Rent-A-Wreck, Inc. (collectively, “Schwartz”), and
    RAWA, the current owner of that brand.                       In the 1970s and 80s,
    Schwartz began using the Rent-A-Wreck name and assigned most of
    his interest in that name to RAWA. 1                Importantly for this appeal,
    Schwartz reserved the exclusive right to sell or operate Rent-A-
    Wreck franchises          in    West   Los   Angeles,      where      he   continued   to
    operate      a   car   rental    business        under   the   name    “Bundy     Rent–A–
    1
    For a detailed description of the origin and evolution of
    the parties’ relationships, see our previous opinion, Schwartz
    v. Rent A Wreck Am. Inc., 468 F. App’x 238 (4th Cir. 2012).
    3
    Wreck.”         RAWA’s         efforts         to       have    this       exclusive-territory
    agreement declared invalid are the subject of this appeal.
    A.
    In   June     2007,         Schwartz      filed         suit    against       RAWA    in     the
    United      States      District       Court        for     the       District       of   Maryland.
    Schwartz sought, in relevant part, a declaratory judgment that
    he    enjoys      the     exclusive            right       to     operate        a   Rent-A-Wreck
    franchise      in       the     Los       Angeles         territory.              RAWA      filed     a
    counterclaim         under      California              Business      and       Professions       Code
    § 16600,       seeking         a     declaration            that       Schwartz’s         purported
    franchise rights are unenforceable under California law because
    those rights preclude RAWA from competing in that territory.
    See    generally        
    Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code § 16600
        (“Except        as
    provided     in    this       chapter,         every      contract         by   which     anyone     is
    restrained        from    engaging         in       a    lawful       profession,         trade,     or
    business of any kind is to that extent void.”).
    A jury heard the parties’ claims in April 2010.                                      It found
    that Schwartz has a “contract . . . with [RAWA] with respect to
    [Schwartz’s] operation of a used car rental business in West Los
    Angeles,” Schwartz v. Rent A Wreck Am. Inc., 468 F. App’x 238,
    243–44 (4th Cir. 2012), and that the contract affords Schwartz
    an    “[e]xclusive        [Rent-A-Wreck]                franchise      .    .    .   in    West     Los
    Angeles,” 
    id. at 244
    .
    4
    After    the    jury    announced      its    verdict,     RAWA    moved   under
    Federal     Rule      of    Civil   Procedure       50   to    set     aside   portions
    thereof.        RAWA       argued   that    the     court     “must    grant   judgment
    notwithstanding the verdict on the jury’s finding that [Schwartz
    has]   an   exclusive         franchise     contract     because       California   law
    provides that noncompetition agreements of this nature are void
    ab initio.”        Defs.’ Mem. Supp. Mot. J. Notwithstanding Verdict
    3, Schwartz v. J.J.F. Mgmt. Servs., Inc., No. 1:07-cv-01679-PJM
    (D. Md. May 18, 2010), ECF No. 308-1.
    The district court denied RAWA’s motion.                       It held that the
    agreement is valid because RAWA and Schwartz have a “franchise
    agreement,” and “franchise agreements . . . are not void under
    California law as . . . non-competitive.”                      Tr. Mot. Proceedings
    59, Schwartz, No. 1:07-cv-01679-PJM (D. Md. July 21, 2010), ECF
    No. 353.       Schwartz appealed.
    B.
    On appeal, we held that the exclusive-territory provision
    does not violate California law if “(1) the implied contract
    found by the jury is a franchising agreement, whereby RAWA can
    maintain some control as is necessary to protect its trademark,
    trade name, and goodwill; and (2) the exclusivity arrangement
    does not foreclose competition in a substantial share of the
    affected line of commerce.”                Schwartz, 468 F. App’x at 251.            We
    also “conclude[d] that the question of whether the exclusive
    5
    territory at issue would foreclose competition in a substantial
    share of the market for rental cars is a question of fact for
    the jury.”           
    Id.
           Because “[t]his issue was not presented to the
    jury    .   .    .     ,       we    vacate[d]       the    district        court’s          denial   of
    [RAWA’s] Rule 50(b) motion” and “instruct[ed] the district court
    to    submit     to        a    jury    the     question        of    whether          the    exclusive
    territory       provision             forecloses          competition        in     a       substantial
    share of the market for rental cars.”                           
    Id.
    C.
    On   remand,            the    district       court      submitted         to    a    jury   both
    questions we identified: (1) whether RAWA maintains sufficient
    control over Schwartz to protect its trademark, trade name, and
    goodwill;       and        (2)       whether     the       exclusive-territory                provision
    forecloses competition for rental cars.                                 Prior to trial, the
    court held that RAWA would bear the burden of proof on both
    issues.     The court also rejected RAWA’s attempts to redefine the
    affected        line       of        commerce    as       the    market       for       Rent-A-Wreck
    franchises because, among other reasons, our previous opinion
    had referred to the market for rental cars.                                 The court explained
    that RAWA could define “an appropriate market for rental cars in
    whatever way [it] so choose[s]”--for example, by defining it as
    the    market        for       the     type     of    rental         cars    that       Rent-A-Wreck
    franchises rent--but RAWA could not define the market in terms
    of    Rent-A-Wreck             franchises       themselves.            J.A.       823.        In    other
    6
    words, the district court limited RAWA to a market in which the
    consumers are those who rent cars from establishments like Rent-
    A-Wreck,    rather     than    those       who    seek    to   operate    Rent-A-Wreck
    franchises.
    A three-day jury trial began on June 18, 2013.                               On the
    first day, RAWA reiterated its view that the affected line of
    commerce is “the sell [sic] of Rent-A-Wreck franchises,” not, as
    the court had ruled, “the rental of cars.”                            J.A. 932.        RAWA
    explained      that,    in    light    of        the   court’s    rejection       of    its
    preferred market definition, it would not present any evidence
    that the exclusive-territory agreement forecloses competition.
    See J.A. 933; see also J.A. 1393–94.                     RAWA argued instead that
    the parties’ contract is not a franchise agreement because RAWA
    lacks control over Schwartz, and that the exclusive-territory
    provision      is   therefore     invalid.               The   jury     rejected       this
    argument; it found that RAWA “has the right to exercise some
    control    over     [Schwartz]    as       is     necessary      to    protect     RAWA’s
    trademark, trade name, and good will.”                    J.A. 902.      The jury also
    found   that    Schwartz’s      exclusive-territory              agreement    does      not
    foreclose competition in a substantial share of the market for
    rental cars.        J.A. 902.         In accordance with this verdict, the
    court     entered      judgment       in    favor        of    Schwartz      on    RAWA’s
    counterclaim and closed the case.                 RAWA appealed.
    7
    II.
    This   appeal        presents      two    issues:   first,   whether    the
    district court erred by assigning RAWA the burden of proving
    that the exclusive-territory agreement forecloses competition;
    and second, whether the district court erred by preventing RAWA
    from   presenting      to    the   jury    its   preferred   definition   of   the
    relevant market. 2      We address each issue in turn.
    A.
    RAWA   first    argues      that    Schwartz    should   have   borne   the
    burden of proving that the exclusive-territory agreement does
    not foreclose competition.             Schwartz responds that RAWA properly
    bore the burden of proof because it was the party claiming that
    the agreement violated California competition law.                      We agree
    with Schwartz.
    2
    RAWA also argues on appeal that the district court erred
    by determining precisely how much control RAWA can exercise over
    Schwartz.   See Appellants’ Br. at 15–30.   This argument is not
    properly before us because the district court entered no
    judgment concerning RAWA’s specific franchise rights.   The jury
    found that RAWA could exercise some control over Schwartz, but
    neither the jury nor the district defined the contours of that
    control.     Because the district court entered no judgment
    concerning RAWA’s specific franchise rights, we may not decide
    whether any such ruling would have been in error.    See Everett
    v. Pitt Cnty. Bd. of Educ., 
    678 F.3d 281
    , 291 (4th Cir. 2012)
    (“[W]e review judgments, not opinions . . . .”    (alteration in
    original) (quoting Crosby v. City of Gastonia, 
    635 F.3d 634
    , 643
    (4th Cir. 2011) (internal quotation marks omitted)).      If the
    parties continue to disagree over how much control RAWA can
    exercise   over   Schwartz,  they  are  free   to  resolve  that
    disagreement through, for example, private negotiations or a
    state-law breach-of-contract action.
    8
    1.
    We review de novo the district court’s allocation of the
    burden of proof.          See Everett v. Pitt Cnty. Bd. of Educ., 
    678 F.3d 281
    , 288 (4th Cir. 2012).                A federal court sitting in
    diversity, we apply state substantive law and federal procedural
    law.       See, e.g., Anand v. Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, 
    754 F.3d 195
    , 198 (4th Cir. 2014).             Because “the assignment of the burden
    of proof is a rule of substantive law,” Dir., Office of Workers’
    Comp. Programs, Dep’t of Labor v. Greenwich Collieries, 
    512 U.S. 267
    , 271 (1994), “our role is to apply the governing state law,
    or, if necessary, predict how the state’s highest court would
    rule on an unsettled issue.”             Horace Mann Ins. Co. v. Gen. Star
    Nat’l Ins. Co., 
    514 F.3d 327
    , 329 (4th Cir. 2008).
    2.
    RAWA brought its counterclaim under California Business and
    Professions Code § 16600, which reads: “Except as provided in
    this chapter,[ 3] every contract by which anyone is restrained
    from engaging in a lawful profession, trade, or business of any
    kind is to that extent void.”              We held in our previous opinion
    that       §   16600   permits   an   exclusive-territory   provision   in   a
    3
    “The chapter excepts noncompetition agreements in the sale
    or dissolution of corporations (§ 16601), partnerships (ibid.;
    § 16602), and limited liability corporations (§ 16602.5).”
    Edwards v. Arthur Andersen LLP, 
    189 P.3d 285
    , 290-91 (Cal.
    2008).
    9
    franchise agreement if, in relevant part, the provision “does
    not foreclose competition in a substantial share of the market.”
    Schwartz, 468 F. App’x at 250–51; see also Comedy Club, Inc. v.
    Improv W. Assocs., 
    553 F.3d 1277
    , 1292 (9th Cir. 2009).                  Now, we
    must decide which party bears the burden of establishing whether
    an     exclusive-territory          provision      forecloses     competition. 4
    Neither the California State Legislature nor the Supreme Court
    of California has addressed this precise question.                 Our task is
    therefore      to   predict   how   the    California   Supreme    Court   would
    answer it.      We predict that it would hold as the district court
    did: The party claiming that an exclusive-territory provision is
    void   under    § 16600   bears     the   burden   of   showing   that   § 16600
    prohibits that provision.
    4
    RAWA maintains that we have already decided this issue
    because our previous opinion “appears to place the burden on
    Schwartz.” Appellants’ Br. at 33. RAWA misreads the following
    passage from our opinion:
    [W]e conclude that [Schwartz is] entitled to the
    exclusive territory provision if two circumstances can
    be met: (1) the implied contract found by the jury is
    a franchising agreement, whereby RAWA can maintain
    some control as is necessary to protect its trademark,
    trade name[,] and goodwill; and (2) the exclusivity
    arrangement does not foreclose competition in a
    substantial share of the affected line of commerce.
    Id. at 33–34 (first alteration in original) (quoting Schwartz,
    468 F. App’x at 251).    This quotation does not establish which
    party bears the burden of proof.     Instead, our use of passive
    voice--“can be met”--allowed the district court to decide in the
    first instance which party should bear that burden.
    10
    California law generally places the burden of proof on the
    party   who     seeks       relief      from    the    court.           This    principle        is
    codified      at    California       Evidence         Code    §    500,     which      provides:
    “Except as otherwise provided by law, a party has the burden of
    proof as to each fact the existence or nonexistence of which is
    essential      to     the    claim      for     relief       or     defense         that    he   is
    asserting.”          No statute or court decision alters this general
    rule    for    § 16600       claims.           In   fact,         the   Supreme       Court      of
    California has recognized that a party bringing a claim under
    § 16600 generally must “allege facts sufficient to constitute a
    cause   of     action       for   unfair       competition          under      . . .       section
    16600.”       Blank v. Kirwan, 
    703 P.2d 58
    , 69 (Cal. 1985); cf.
    Dayton Time Lock Serv., Inc. v. Silent Watchman Corp., 
    124 Cal. Rptr. 678
    , 682 (Ct. App. 1975) (noting plaintiff’s failure to
    “develop material evidence” to support its claim under § 16600
    that “performance           of    the    [exclusive-dealing]              contract         [would]
    foreclose competition in a substantial share of the affected
    line of commerce”).
    There is no reason to believe that the Supreme Court of
    California would carve out an exception to this general rule for
    a   claim     that    an    exclusive-franchise              agreement         is    void    under
    11
    § 16600. 5   California courts consider the following factors when
    “determining      whether     the    normal      allocation     of    the     burden   of
    proof    should    be   altered”:     (1)     “the     knowledge      of   the    parties
    concerning      the     particular       fact”       to    be   proved;       (2)    “the
    availability      of    the   evidence      to   the      parties”;   (3)     “the   most
    desirable result in terms of public policy in the absence of
    proof of the particular fact”; and (4) “the probability of the
    existence or nonexistence of the fact.”                     Amaral v. Cintas Corp.
    No. 2, 
    78 Cal. Rptr. 3d 572
    , 596 (Ct. App. 2008) (quoting Lakin
    v. Watkins Associated Indus., 
    863 P.2d 179
    , 189 (Cal. 1993))
    (internal    quotation        mark   omitted).            Applying    these      factors,
    courts   have     shifted     “the   normal      allocation     of    the     burden   of
    5
    RAWA argues that the Northern District of California’s
    opinion in Scott v. Snelling & Snelling, Inc., 
    732 F. Supp. 1034
    (N.D. Cal. 1990), “required” the district court here to place
    the burden of proof on Schwartz.    Appellants’ Br. at 31.   But
    Scott--which is of course not binding on the district or this
    court--does not support RAWA’s position.       In that case, a
    franchisor brought breach-of-contract and unfair-competition
    claims against some of its former franchisees.      
    Id. at 1036
    .
    The franchisor alleged that the former franchisees had violated
    a restrictive covenant they had signed by using the franchisor’s
    trade secrets to compete unfairly with current franchisees. 
    Id. at 1036, 1043
    . The court began its analysis by recognizing that
    post-employment covenants not to compete are unenforceable under
    California law unless a “former employee uses a former
    employer’s   trade   secrets    or   otherwise   commits  unfair
    competition,” in which case “a judicially created exception to
    section 16600” applies. 
    Id. at 1043
    . The court then placed the
    burden of proving the existence of a trade secret on the
    franchisor.   
    Id. at 1038
    .   This holding is consistent with our
    holding today: like the Scott court, we place the burden of
    proof on the party bringing the claim.
    12
    proof . . . in spoliation of evidence cases, negligence per se
    actions, and product liability cases based on design defect.”
    Nat’l Council Against Health Fraud, Inc. v. King Bio Pharm.,
    Inc., 
    133 Cal. Rptr. 2d 207
    , 214–15 (Ct. App. 2003) (footnote
    and citations omitted).              For these types of cases, the burden of
    proof   shifts      to   the     defendant      where     “there    is   a     substantial
    probability      the     defendant       has    engaged    in    wrongdoing       and     the
    defendant’s wrongdoing makes it practically impossible for the
    plaintiff to prove the wrongdoing.”                     Cassady v. Morgan, Lewis &
    Bockius LLP, 
    51 Cal. Rptr. 3d 527
    , 537 (Ct. App. 2006) (quoting
    Nat’l Council Against Health Fraud, 133 Cal. Rptr. 2d at 214)
    (internal quotation mark omitted).
    Here,    none       of    the    four     factors    weighs    in   favor       of   the
    conclusion     that       RAWA’s         § 16600       counterclaim       is     a    “rare
    instance[]” in which “the burden of proof set forth in Evidence
    Code section 500 [should be] altered.”                    Id.    With respect to the
    first   and   second          factors,      Schwartz     would     not   have    superior
    knowledge      of        whether        the         exclusive-territory          provision
    forecloses competition or greater access to evidence of such
    foreclosure.         Nor,      under     the   third     factor,    do   public       policy
    considerations         suggest       that    exclusive-territory         provisions        in
    franchise agreements should be unenforceable in the absence of
    proof that they foreclose competition.                      Indeed, such exclusive
    dealing     arrangements         can     be     pro-competitive,         as    when       they
    13
    “provide an incentive for the marketing of new products and a
    guarantee of quality-control distribution.”                                Dayton Time Lock
    Serv., 124 Cal. Rptr. at 682.                          Finally, with respect to the
    fourth   factor,        we   have       no   reason      to   believe       that   exclusive-
    franchise   agreements            so    frequently        foreclose        competition      that
    courts should presume that they have anticompetitive effects.
    We therefore conclude that the baseline rule applies: RAWA bears
    the burden of proving its § 16600 claim.                         Accordingly, we affirm
    the district court’s allocation of that burden.
    B.
    RAWA     next       argues         that     the      district         court    erred     by
    preventing RAWA from presenting its preferred market definition
    to the jury.         Though RAWA repeatedly attempted before and at
    trial to define the affected line of commerce as the market for
    Rent-A-Wreck franchises, it now claims that it tried to define
    that line as the market for “older [rental] vehicles, generally
    from two to eight years old.”                         Appellants’ Br. at 36; accord
    Reply Br. at 10.              Schwartz responds that the district court
    “encouraged”       RAWA      to        proffer        evidence      that    the     exclusive-
    territory     agreement        forecloses             competition      in    a     rental    car
    market, but RAWA refused.                    Appellees’ Br. at 56–57.                 For two
    reasons, we find no error.
    First,       the     district           court     did    not     prevent      RAWA     from
    defining    the    relevant         market       as     one   for    older       rental   cars.
    14
    Contrary     to    what     it    now    argues,    RAWA    proposed         the    following
    market     definition       for    trial:      “The   line       of   commerce       in    this
    dispute     is     the     sale    of    Rent-A-Wreck        brand         franchises,     for
    renting and leasing used motor vehicles that are less than eight
    years old.”         J.A. 790 (emphasis added); accord J.A. 819, 932.
    The district court rejected that definition, but made clear that
    RAWA could delineate “an appropriate market for rental cars in
    whatever way [it] so choose[s], defining that market as rental
    cars, rental cars older than 8 years old, etc.”                            J.A. 823.       RAWA
    then chose not to define any rental car market.                            See, e.g., J.A.
    819.      Having made this choice, RAWA cannot now claim that the
    district court prevented it from advocating a market for older
    rental vehicles.
    Second, the district court rightly rejected RAWA’s attempts
    to define the market as one for Rent-A-Wreck franchises.                               In our
    previous opinion, we “instruct[ed] the district court to submit
    to   a    jury    the     question       of   whether      the     exclusive        territory
    provision forecloses competition in a substantial share of the
    market     for     rental     cars.”          Schwartz,      468      F.    App’x    at    251
    (emphasis        added).         Because      franchises     are      not     rental      cars,
    RAWA’s     preferred       market       definition    was    inconsistent           with    our
    mandate and therefore impermissible.                    The district court did not
    err by enforcing our mandate.                  See Scott v. Mason Coal Co., 
    289 F.3d 263
    , 267 (4th Cir. 2002) (“[W]hen we remand a case, the
    15
    lower court must ‘implement both the letter and spirit of the .
    . . mandate.’” (second alteration in original) (quoting United
    States v. Bell, 
    5 F.3d 64
    , 66 (4th Cir. 1993)).
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district
    court is
    AFFIRMED.
    16